Paste text below
Text entered
A by-product of the laundering process is tonnes of a highly toxic waste that is dumped indiscriminately with no care for the harm it causes to the environment. The waste is usually dumped in the countryside to avoid detection. It is estimated that these 27 laundering plants could have produced up to 140,000 litres of toxic waste, enough to fill around 700 wheelie bins. A tonne of waste costs around £1,000 to clean up - funding that has to come from the taxpayer.Pat Curtis, HMRC Specialist Investigations, said:“Laundered fuel is unregulated and dangerous and its profits fund organised crime. These staggering figures show that people involved in fuel laundering have a complete disregard for the harm it does to communities. Fuel fraud is a significant threat to the economic, social and environmental welfare of the UK. HMRC will continue to detect those attempting to smuggle, launder, sell or use illicit fuel. Anyone with any information about suspected fuel fraud should contact the Custom’s Hotline on 0800 59 5000.”
Text entered is not saved. Save now
Save above text so that it can be shared and viewed side-by-side with news articles
- Liam Keelan joins BBC Worldwide ...
- British Chambers of Commerce - ...
- Government pledges support for ...
- Fearne Cotton and Zane Lowe host ...
- Mercury poisoning ruled out as ...
- Derby day travel
- East of England Weekly Roadworks ...
- Roadworks information for ...
- Scotland’s tax credit claimants ...
- Burglary at football club
- Teenage boy raped, Sunderland
- BBC Four secures rights to new ...
- Award-winning queen of comedy ...
- drZjPTshAGUcBKy
- Marks & Spencer launches ...
- Monitise Creates New Technology ...
- easyJet announces expansion ...
- Tesco strengthens position in ...
- Council fined after man with ...
- Restaurateur and Executive Chef ...
- OnePoll (Digestives)
- New 'thunder-thighs' dinosaur ...
- STRONG ORDER BOOKS BOOST OUTPUT ...
- Waitrose to open first ever ...
- Fish stolen in South Tyneside
- Jane Austen's famous style may ...
- Explicit sex ed materials pushed ...
- Kelkoo Unveils ...
- Press Association - iPad2 tablet ...
- Avon and Somerset Police Arrest ...
| 5 news articles similar to text entered | Visualisation | Side-by-side | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| , |
cut |
pasted |
characters |
|||
Loading news articles
Text entered
A by-product of the laundering process is tonnes of a highly toxic waste that is dumped indiscriminately with no care for the harm it causes to the environment. The waste is usually dumped in the countryside to avoid detection. It is estimated that these 27 laundering plants could have produced up to 140,000 litres of toxic waste, enough to fill around 700 wheelie bins. A tonne of waste costs around £1,000 to clean up - funding that has to come from the taxpayer.Pat Curtis, HMRC Specialist Investigations, said:“Laundered fuel is unregulated and dangerous and its profits fund organised crime. These staggering figures show that people involved in fuel laundering have a complete disregard for the harm it does to communities. Fuel fraud is a significant threat to the economic, social and environmental welfare of the UK. HMRC will continue to detect those attempting to smuggle, launder, sell or use illicit fuel. Anyone with any information about suspected fuel fraud should contact the Custom’s Hotline on 0800 59 5000.”
Churn statistics
cut
pasted
characters overlap