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The Treasury, in exercise of the powers conferred by section 30 of and Schedule 6 paragraphs 18(2), 18(3), 18A(1), 18A(7), 146(7) and 147 to the Finance Act 2000[1], make the following Regulations, a draft of which has, in accordance with paragraph 146(3) of that Schedule, been laid before Parliament and approved by a resolution of the House of Commons: Citation and commencement 1. These Regulations may be cited as the Climate Change Levy (Fuel Use and Recycling Processes) Regulations 2005 and shall come into force on the day after the day on which they are made. Interpretation 2. In these Regulations—
Use as fuel or otherwise
(b) any uses of a taxable commodity that are not specified in Schedule 1 are specified by this paragraph as uses that are to be taken as being uses of that commodity as fuel.
Recycling processes 1. Electricity in electrolysis for the production of:
2.
Electricity in the following types of electrolysis:
3.
Electricity in battery formation
10.
Methane as a feedstock in producing higher paraffins and their derivatives These mixed uses are the only ones that involve relevant commodities being used partly as fuel and partly not, but which are specified as being uses that are not to be taken as being uses of those commodities as fuel (see paragraph 18(3) of the Act). 18. Coal, coke and natural gas as chemical reductants for ironmaking, for example, in blast furnaces 19. Coal, coke and natural gas as chemical reductants in the blast furnace production of zinc and other non-ferrous metals 20. Coal and coke in the recarburising of iron and steel 21. Coke breeze in a sinter plant to assist in the agglomeration of iron ore and its subsequent chemical reduction in blast furnaces 22. Coke injected into electric arc furnaces to control the chemistry of the steel and the steelmaking slag 23. Coke charged to electric arc furnaces to control the oxygen activity of the steel melt 24. Coke as a carburiser in iron casting 25. Coke as a source of carbon dioxide in the Ammonia Soda process for producing soda ash 26. Anthracite as a reductant in the smelting of precious metals 27. Gas for vacuum reduction in metal powder production and to maintain carbon content in metal during the sintering process 28. Gas to maintain or increase the carbon content of metals during heat treatment 29. Natural gas as a reductant in emission control systems, for example, in the reduction of oxides of nitrogen 30. Natural gas in the manufacture of methocrylate monomers and polymers including that natural gas used for emission control which is an integral and essential part of the manufacturing process 31. Natural gas as feedstock in the production of carbon black 32. Natural gas as feedstock in a gas generator supplying a reducing atmosphere for the treatment or annealing of metal products 33. Liquid propane in the production of ethylene where heat is provided either by combustion of the waste products or from another source 34. Commodities in reduction furnaces for the production of lead 35. Commodities in the reduction of chlorine 36. Commodities to form reducing atmospheres, for example, in the refining and manipulation of molten copper to control oxygen levels 37. Commodities in ASARCO (American Smelting and Refining Company) shaft furnaces, the deoxidisation of copper swarf and the annealing of copper and copper alloys to provide a reducing atmosphere Description The preparation of scrap metal for recycling.
(b) scrap generated from the process of which that preparation forms part or from a different process (for example, off–cuts from metal stampings, unmarketable goods).
(b) the heating of scrap as part of the recycling process before any solidification and re-melting.
(This note is not part of the Regulations) Climate change levy is charged on supplies of electricity, gas and solid fuels that are not for domestic or charity use. Supplies for non-fuel use are exempt, as are supplies for fuel use in a prescribed recycling process.[5] Exemption for non-fuel uses Regulation 3 and Schedule 1 specify non-fuel uses, and regulation 3(b) specifies everything else as fuel use[6]. Exemption for fuel use in prescribed recycling processes Regulation 4 and Schedule 2 prescribe the relevant recycling processes. Regulatory impact assessment A full regulatory impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as it has no impact on the costs of business, charities or voluntary bodies. Notes: [1] 2000 c. 17; paragraph 18A was inserted and paragraphs 146 and 147 were amended by section 188 of the Finance Act 2003 (c. 14).back [3] S.I. 2001/1138, amended by S.I. 2003/665.back [5] Finance Act 2000 (c. 17) Schedule 6 paragraphs 2, 3, 8, 9, 18 and 18A, the latter inserted by the Finance Act 2003 (c. 14) section 188. The recycling process must compete with a process benefiting from the non-fuel exemption, see paragraph 18A(2).back [6] Additionally, regulation 5 revokes the existing provisions in S.I. 2001/1138 and S.I. 2003/665. Schedule 1 Item 32 adds to the specified non-fuel uses.back
ISBN 0 11 073135 2
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