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Economic Development

Cornish businessmen to pay £240k for illegal waste disposal

Neal Tremayne and Brian Matthews pleaded guilty to various environmental offences

Liquid waste storage tanks.(Image: Environment Agency)

Two businessmen will pay more than £240,000 after being convicted for operating an illegal waste disposal operation where raw sewage was “injected” into the Cornish countryside.

Company director Neal Tremayne used his firm, Carnon Valley Transport, to collect septic tank contents and other controlled wastes from holiday and caravan parks, hotels, a farm, abattoir and a car dealership. He then put that waste into giant storage tankers belonging to Brian Matthews.

Mr Matthews was paid a quarter of the going rate for legitimate disposal and he did this by injecting the mixture into the ground at farmland he rented in Kehelland, Crosslanes, Sparnock and Mithian in West Cornwall.

Both men pleaded guilty to various environmental offences.

For negligent culpability and environmental harm, Mr Matthews, of Twelvehead, Truro was ordered to pay £136,674.50 under the Proceeds of Crime Act within three months or face imprisonment, fined £8,000 plus £10,000 in costs at Truro Crown Court last week (April 14).

Judge Carr called Matthews’ operation “woefully lax and inadequate”, adding: “It was effectively an open door policy for waste to be deposited. No staff on site, no inspections, no checking of the chits.

“It was no surprise that Brian Matthews was able to charge significantly less for disposal and run a profitable business, making £1.3m between 2013 and 2019.”

Mr Tremayne of Penryn, Cornwall, was ordered to pay £80,000 under the Proceeds of Crime Act within three months or face imprisonment, given a four-month prison sentence suspended for 12 months, alongside fines for him and his firm totalling £3,000 plus £3,450 in costs.