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Under the [[United Kingdom|British]] '''Alkali Act 1863''', an Alkali Inspector and four subinspectors were appointed to curb the discharge into the air of [[hydrochloric acid|hydrochloric]] [[gas]] from the [[Leblanc process| Le Blanc alkali]] works.
Under the [[United Kingdom|British]] '''Alkali Act 1863''', an Alkali Inspector and four subinspectors were appointed to curb discharge into the air of [[hydrochloric acid|hydrochloric]] [[gas]] from the [[Leblanc process| Le Blanc alkali]] works.


In [[1874]] the Inspector became the Chief Inspector. The Chief Inspector was statutorily responsible for the standards set and maintained by the Inspectorate, and reported directly to the Permanent Secretary of his Department. For the first sixty years of its existence, the Inspectorate was solely concerned with the heavy [[chemical industry|chemicals industry]], but from the [[1920s]] onwards, its responsibilities were expanded, culminating in the Alkali Order [[1958]]. This placed all major heavy industries which emitted [[smoke]], grit, dust and fumes under the supervision of the Inspectorate.
In [[1874]] the Inspector became the Chief Inspector. The Chief Inspector was statutorily responsible for the standards set and maintained by the Inspectorate, and reported directly to the Permanent Secretary of his Department. For the first sixty years of its existence, the Inspectorate was solely concerned with the heavy [[chemical industry|chemicals industry]], but from the [[1920s]] onwards, its responsibilities were expanded, culminating in the Alkali Order [[1958]]. This placed all major heavy industries which emitted [[smoke]], grit, dust and fumes under the supervision of the Inspectorate.

Revision as of 15:20, 19 May 2008

Under the British Alkali Act 1863, an Alkali Inspector and four subinspectors were appointed to curb discharge into the air of hydrochloric gas from the Le Blanc alkali works.

In 1874 the Inspector became the Chief Inspector. The Chief Inspector was statutorily responsible for the standards set and maintained by the Inspectorate, and reported directly to the Permanent Secretary of his Department. For the first sixty years of its existence, the Inspectorate was solely concerned with the heavy chemicals industry, but from the 1920s onwards, its responsibilities were expanded, culminating in the Alkali Order 1958. This placed all major heavy industries which emitted smoke, grit, dust and fumes under the supervision of the Inspectorate.

Timeline

The Inspectorate has worked under the purview of many different departments:

The Chief Inspector's independence disappeared when the Inspectorate was transferred to the Health and Safety Executive in 1975.

The Inspectorate was known as Industrial Air Pollution Inspectorate from 1983 to 1987 and became Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Pollution (HMIP) when it was transferred back to the Department of the Environment in 1987.

HMIP became part of the Environment Agency on April 1 1996.

A further Alkali Act was passed in 1906. Together with amendments, the Alkali Act became the main legislative control of industrial pollution in the UK. It was finally repealed and replaced by the Environmental Protection Act 1990.