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Mr. Curry : A moratorium on commercial whaling has been agreed by the International Whaling Commission and has operated since 1985. The United Kingdom strongly supports the moratorium. Its future will be a key issue for discussion at the commission's 44th annual meeting in Glasgow this month.

Ms. Walley : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will make it his policy to promote at the International Whaling Commission meeting in Glasgow in June (a) a total and permanent ban on commercial whaling and (b) the declaration of Antartic waters as a whale sanctuary ; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Curry : A moratorium on commercial whaling, promoted by the IWC, has operated since 1985. The moratorium has been supported by the United Kingdom which has banned whaling within British fishery limits since 1976. A proposal to establish a whale sanctuary in the southern hemisphere, south of 40 S, has been put forward by the French Government for discussion at the


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next IWC meeting. Details of this proposal have only just been received and will require careful study. The proposals address a number of questions to the International Whaling Commission's scientific committee whose advice we shall also need to evaluate.

Ms. Walley : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what plans he has to press the European Commission to draw up proposals for a permanent ban on whaling in EC waters.

Mr. Curry : I refer the hon. Member to the reply I gave to the hon. Member for Southwark and Bermondsey (Mr. Hughes) on 4 June, Official Report, column 642.

Milk Marketing

Mr. Ron Davies : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what plans he has to respond to the milk marketing board's proposals to turn itself into a single voluntary co-operative with pooled prices.

Mr. Curry : The Government have welcomed the board's proposals which represent a major step forward, and is currently considering them, together with equivalent proposals from the other four United Kingdom boards. We intend to introduce legislation this season to facilitate the conversion of the boards into non-statutory organisations.

Industrial Fishing

Mr. Austin Mitchell : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what proposals he has for phasing out industrial fishing ; and whether he will make it his policy for decomissioning grants to be concentrated on this area to reduce effort.

Mr. Curry : There is as yet insufficient evidence to win an argument in the Council of Ministers that industrial fishing harms human consumption fisheries and should be phased out. In the United Kingdom industrial fishery the Shetland sandeel fishery was closed in 1990 and remains shut. Access to the west coast of Scotland sandeel fishery is restricted by licence. The bycatch of human consumption species in industrial fisheries is considerably smaller than the discards of juvenile fish from the white fish fisheries. Very few United Kingdom vessels are involved in industrial fishing. Decommissioning funds will be used to target effort in order to maximise the value for money of the public funds available. All applications for decommissioning grants will be evaluated using the same criteria. Decommissioning funds will be used to target effort in order to maximise the value for money of the public funds available. All applications for decommissioning grants will be evaluated using the same criteria.

Sheep Scab

Mr. Tredinnick : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food whether he is now in a position to make an announcement about the future of sheep scab controls.

Mr. Soames : Sheep scab is a disease which can be readily controlled at the individual farm level and sheep farmers are well aware of the preventative measures and procedures needed to deal with the disease in their flocks. Compulsory national dipping arrangements required all


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flocks to be dipped, whether or not infected or at risk of infection. In 1991 the disease was recorded by the State Veterinary Service in 116 flocks out of 105,000 sheep holdings in Great Britain.

The Government decided that responsibility for action to deal with sheep scab should rest with farmers. The dipping of sheep will no longer be compulsory and shortly legislation will be put before Parliament proposing that the disease will cease to be notifiable or subject to statutory control measures when it is discovered. Legislation is already in place to protect the welfare of animals. We shall not hesitate to press for the prosecution of those who do not deal promptly and satisfactorily with outbreaks of sheep scab in their flocks. Field staff of the State Veterinary Service will, as in other cases where the welfare of animals may be at risk, look for evidence of sheep scab during their visits to markets and farms and will investigate all cases reported to them, where there is a potential welfare problem. Every sheep farmer will be contacted, in writing, to remind farmers of their responsibilities for controlling sheep scab and of the procedures they should follow should their flocks become infected.

Relocation

Mr. Bayley : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food when an announcement will be made on the choice of the site in York to which 600 headquarters posts from his Department will be relocating in 1994.

Mr. Gummer : I hope to make an announcement in due course.

CAP Reform

Mr. Martlew : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what effect he expects the recent agreement on CAP reform to have on the price, over the next three years, of (a) 1lb of bacon, (b) a standard loaf and (c) lb of butter.

Mr. Curry : It is not possible to give precise estimates. The reform process will be spread over a number of years, and during this period retail food prices will be affected by a number of factors. However, at the end of the reform period the retail food price index could be some 2 per cent. lower on average than it would otherwise have been.

Mail Order Foods

Mr. Kirkwood : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what response he has made to the Mail Order Fine Food Association's "Proposals for Improving Safety Standards in Mail Order Foods", a copy of which has been sent to him ; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Curry : I have recently written to the Mail Order Fine Foods Association outlining my response to that organisation's paper entitled "Proposals for Improving Safety Standards in Mail Order Foods". I welcome the formation of the association and applaud its primary objective of introducing and maintaining improved standards of food quality and hygiene throughout the mail order trade. Moreover, the association's initiative in drawing up a code of good hygiene practice for the mail order food industry is to be commended. Given the importance of temperature control and of scrupulous


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attention to hygiene at the production and packing stages of all foods, I shall be interested to follow the progress of this code and the extent to which, though voluntary, it commands general acceptance in the mail order sector.

Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy

Dr. David Clark : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, pursuant to his answer of 22 May, Official Report, columns 322-23 , if he will list the locations of incinerators approved by his Ministry for the disposal of BSE cows ; and what is the weekly capacity for each one.

Mr. Gummer : The Ministry uses eight incineration plants in England and Wales for the incineration of suspect BSE carcases. They are located in Gloucestershire, Hertfordshire, Somerset, Nottinghamshire, Avon, Cornwall, Dyfed and Clywd. One of these is at a Ministry veterinary investigation centre located in Sutton Bonington, Nottinghamshire and has the capacity to incinerate 22 carcases per week. The others are privately owned and operate on a commercial basis. The Ministry cannot therefore disclose details, such as individual capacity, for these plants.

Dr. David Clark : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will convene a working party of independent scientists to produce an updated report on bovine spongiform encephalopathy ; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Gummer : I did so in 1990 and this committee, chaired by Dr. Tyrrell, has produced advice to Ministers on a number of occasions. In each case the recommendations have been made public and implemented in full.

Mr. Ron Davies : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will show the number of confirmed cases of BSE in each county of England and Wales from May.

Mr. Soames : The number of cases confirmed for England and Wales from 1 May 1992 to 29 May 1992 is as follows. These cases will have a date of clinical onset of disease, and indeed date of report, before 1 May.


County                      |Confirmed cases                

------------------------------------------------------------

England                                                     

Avon                        |46                             

Bedfordshire                |8                              

Berkshire                   |10                             

Buckinghamshire             |23                             

Cambridgeshire              |10                             

Cheshire                    |176                            

Cleveland                   |4                              

Cornwall                    |258                            

Cumbria                     |103                            

Derbyshire                  |109                            

Devon                       |343                            

Dorset                      |164                            

Durham                      |19                             

Essex                       |6                              

Gloucestershire             |49                             

Hampshire                   |42                             

Hereford and Worcestershire |56                             

Hertfordshire               |5                              

Humberside                  |15                             

Isle of Wight               |11                             

Kent                        |38                             

Lancashire                  |103                            

Leicestershire              |58                             

Lincolnshire                |11                             

London                      |3                              

Manchester                  |0                              

Merseyside                  |2                              

Norfolk                     |75                             

Northamptonshire            |24                             

Northumberland              |34                             

Nottinghamshire             |24                             

Oxfordshire                 |42                             

Shropshire                  |81                             

Somerset                    |209                            

Staffordshire               |95                             

Suffolk                     |27                             

Surrey                      |22                             

Susex, East                 |24                             

Sussex, West                |52                             

Tyne and Wear               |1                              

Warwickshire                |30                             

West Midlands               |3                              

Wiltshire                   |104                            

Yorks, North                |152                            

Yorks, South                |6                              

Yorks, West                 |24                             

                                                            

Wales                                                       

Clwyd                       |52                             

Dyfed                       |199                            

Glamorgan, North            |2                              

Glamorgan, South            |11                             

Glamorgan, West             |2                              

Gwent                       |21                             

Gwynedd                     |14                             

Powys                       |59                             

Myxomatosis Vaccine

Mr. Moate : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food when stocks of myxomatosis vaccine for pet rabbits will be exhausted ; what assessment he has made of the likely consequences for domestic pets ; how this situation has arisen ; and if he will take steps to secure immediate production of this vaccine.

Mr. Soames : Discussions between licence holders and the licensing authority are confidential matters on which I am unable to comment under the terms of section 118 of the Medicines Act 1968. I can confirm however that a licence for myxomatosis vaccine was recently surrendered by the licence holder. Information on the stocks available is not held centrally but there will be no further supplies once those currently held by veterinarians have been exhausted. Informal discussions have taken place with representatives of the veterinary pharmaceutical industry about the possibility that other companies might wish to make applications for a licence but so far no applications have been forthcoming. This is a commercial decision for the companies concerned and will clearly be influenced by the perceived level of demand for such a product.

Any application would need to be considered against the scientific criteria of safety, quality and efficacy as required by the Medicines Act and would be assessed as speedily as possible.

Food (Radioactivity)

Mr. Martlew : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food what action he has taken on the recommendation by the Agriculture Committee that his


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Department should develop a monitoring system at key food outlets to give an indication of day-to-day levels of radiocativity in major foodstuffs.

Mr. Soames : The Ministry's priority remains the monitoring of sheep at the point of production to ensure that contaminated animals or produce are identified and prevented from entering the food chain.

To supplement these live monitoring arrangements, the Department operates a programme of monitoring at a number of slaughterhouses which take sheep from the Cumbria restricted area. In addition, our terrestrial radioactivity monitoring programme involves the monitoring of milk at dairies covering 27 counties in England and Wales. The results of this monitoring are published regularly and copies are placed in the Libraries of the House.

Also, monitoring programmes for radioactivity in food operated by various bodies have been published in a compendium "Programmes to Monitor Radioactivity in Food : Food Surveillance Paper No. 28, HMSO, 1990". This report gives an indication of the further extensive monitoring of food that currently takes place.

Suckler Cow Premium

Mr. John Greenway : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food if he will make a statement on the rate of suckler cow premium for the 1992 scheme year.

Mr. Gummer : At its meeting on 18 to 21 May, the Council of Agriculture Ministers agreed that the Community-funded element of the suckler cow premium for the 1992 scheme year should be 50 ecu--£39.77- -per head. There will continue to be provision for an optional national top -up to the Community-funded premium. I expect the Commission to produce a draft implementing regulation shortly. An announcement on the rate of premium to apply in the United Kingdom for the 1992 scheme will be made in due course. In the meantime, I have laid an amendment to the relevant statutory instrument--SI 1992/1210, the Suckler Cow Premium (Amendment No. 2) Regulations 1992--to make it clear that the rates currently set out apply only to applications in respect of the 1991 scheme year.

Meat Inspection

Mr. Clifton-Brown : To ask the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food whether he has now concluded the review of meat inspection charges which he announced on 9 March ; and if he will make a statement.

Mr. Gummer : I am today making available in the Library of the House copies of summary statistics collected by the review team, and of recommendations by the agriculture departments to interested local authorities and members of the meat industry. These are directed at clarifying the basis on which charges are calculated, and enabling co- operation between plant operators and local authorities to facilitate consistent and cost-effective inspection throughout Great Britain. I hope that they will help local authorities discharge their statutory responsibilities efficiently, in the period of transition until the new national meat hygiene service takes over these responsibilities. We wish to thank those local authorities and members of the industry who provided information to the review team.


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The Government remain concerned that the EC legislation under which meat inspection charges are required to be levied should be efficient, cost effective and applied on a uniform basis throughout the Community. In the light of the detailed findings of the review, we will be pressing the European Commission to bring forward satisfactory proposals for the revision of these EC arrangements for discussion by the Council of Ministers. This issue has important implications for fair competition in the single market, and we will press for it to be resolved in the forthcoming UK presidency.

NATIONAL FINANCE

Brewing

Mr. Luff : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what plans he has to review the impact of excise duty on smaller brewers.

Sir John Cope : The position of smaller brewers was considered during the pre-Budget review of indirect taxation, but my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer decided to make no change. However, small brewers should benefit from the forthcoming change in the method of taxing beer. The present wastage allowance, which often does not cover all their production losses, will be abolished, and they will pay duty only on the beer they actually despatch for sale. The Government have no present plans for a further review.


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Home Care Services

Mr. Cousins : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what representations he has received on the subject of VAT charges on home care services ; and if he will place the text of such representations and his reply to them in the Library.

Sir John Cope : Treasury Ministers have received a number of representations about VAT on the provision of domiciliary care. I have arranged for the text of a typical reply to such representations to be placed in the Library of the House.

Manufacturing Investment

Mr. Peter Bottomley : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what proportion of gross domestic product manufacturing investment, including leased assets, represented in 1979 and 1991.

Mr. Nelson : Estimates of manufacturing investment and gross domestic product may be obtained from the CSO database accessible through the House of Commons Library.

Exchange Rate Mechanism

Mr. Austin Mitchell : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will set out for each month the variation of the pound sterling inside or outside the 2 per cent. and 6 per cent. bands since its entry into the European exchange rate mechanism.

Mr. Nelson : Sterling does not participate in the narrow band of the ERM. The table lists the average monthly percentage variation of sterling from its central rates against other ERM currencies since joining the exchange rate mechanism.


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|c|Sterling's percentage deviation from its central rates against the other ERM currencies|c|     

              |Deutschmark  |Dutch Guilder|Belgian/     |Danish Krone |Irish Punt                 

                                          |Luxembourg                                             

                                          |Franc                                                  

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

October 1990  |0.74         |0.78         |0.54         |0.77         |0.64                       

November      |-1.07        |-0.96        |-1.04        |-0.58        |-0.99                      

December      |-2.40        |-2.26        |-2.06        |-1.38        |-1.77                      

January 1991  |-1.10        |-1.04        |-1.19        |-0.16        |-0.70                      

February      |-1.40        |-1.38        |-1.59        |-0.54        |-0.84                      

March         |-0.65        |-0.61        |-0.77        |-0.02        |-0.12                      

April         |1.02         |1.01         |0.46         |1.38         |1.17                       

May           |0.47         |0.46         |-0.21        |0.79         |0.55                       

June          |-0.36        |-0.36        |-0.47        |0.64         |-0.20                      

July          |-0.12        |-0.14        |-0.32        |1.24         |0.03                       

August        |-0.48        |-0.46        |-0.67        |0.88         |-0.29                      

September     |-0.79        |-0.78        |-0.92        |0.41         |-0.58                      

October       |-1.33        |-1.32        |-1.50        |-0.09        |-1.15                      

November      |-2.19        |-2.17        |-2.31        |-0.42        |-1.88                      

December      |-3.13        |-3.11        |-3.24        |-1.17        |-2.58                      

January 1992  |-3.19        |-3.23        |-3.34        |-1.50        |-2.58                      

February      |-2.47        |-2.58        |-2.68        |-0.89        |-2.10                      

March         |-2.90        |-2.99        |-3.12        |-1.24        |-2.49                      

April         |-1.85        |-1.94        |-2.09        |-0.24        |-1.36                      

May           |-0.50        |-0.59        |-0.71        |0.74         |-0.22                      


|c|Sterling's percentage deviation from   

its central rates against the other ERM   

currencies|c|                             

------------------------------------------

1990                                      

  October   |-2.74|-    |0.85 |0.59       

  November  |-3.67|-    |-0.58|-0.67      

  December  |-4.08|-    |-1.64|-1.16      

1991                                      

  January   |-4.04|-    |-0.62|0.18       

  February  |-5.11|-    |-1.08|0.07       

  March     |-4.95|-    |-0.97|0.82       

  April     |-4.07|-    |0.04 |1.79       

  May       |-4.33|-    |-0.34|1.55       

  June      |-4.40|-    |-0.99|0.78       

  July      |-3.75|-    |-0.59|1.07       

  August    |-4.38|-    |-0.57|0.84       

  September |-4.24|-    |-0.85|0.68       

  October   |-4.28|-    |-1.39|0.30       

  November  |-4.83|-    |-1.53|-0.35      

  December  |-4.88|-    |-2.10|-1.30      

1992                                      

  January   |-5.63|-    |-2.47|-1.54      

  February  |-5.74|-    |-2.06|-1.02      

  March     |-5.74|-    |-2.48|-1.71      

  April     |-4.91|-3.52|-1.22|-1.03      

  May       |-4.30|-4.72|0.10 |-0.26      

Note:                                     

Sterling joined the exchange rate         

mechanism on 8 October 1990. The          

Portuguese Escudo joined the ERM on 6     

April 1992.                               

Malawi

Mrs. Clwyd : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement outlining Her Majesty's Government's policy on commercial loans to Malawi.

Mr. Nelson : Her Majesty's Government's policy on commercial bank loans to Malawi is that such loans are a matter to be decided by the banks and the Government of Malawi.

Profit-related Pay

Mr. Ian Taylor : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer how many employees participated in live registered profit-related pay schemes in the last period for which figures are available ; how many schemes are in operation ; and what is the estimated total value of those schemes.

Mr. Dorrell : There were 736,000 participating employees in 2,895 live registered profit-related pay schemes at the end of April 1992. On the basis of the latest information provided by participating employers, the total annual value of the distributable profit-related pay pool for these schemes is tentatively estimated at about £500 million.

Employee Share Options

Mr. Ian Taylor : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer how many employees have received shares under qualifying employee share option trusts ; and what is the current total value of shares in such trusts.

Mr. Dorrell : The Inland Revenue may not learn of the establishment of employee share ownership trusts of the kind defined in the Finance Act 1989 until claims for the tax relief provided by the legislation are received. Such claims may be made up to two years after the end of the period of account in which the relevant contributions are made. A return seeking information on the operation of the trust will not be sent out for completion until confirmation that a claim has been allowed has been received centrally. No such confirmations have yet been received.


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Business Expansion Scheme

Mr. John Evans : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer how many new lettings from investments under the business expansion scheme in 1990-91 there were in (a) the United Kingdom, (b) north-west England and (c) St. Helens ; and what percentage these figures represent of (i) all privately rented property and (ii) all rented property.

Mr. Dorrell : Provisional estimates for new lettings from investments under the business expansion scheme in 1990-91 are as follows. Separate figures for St. Helens could be obtained only at disproportionate cost.


;

|c|New lettings|c|                                         

                    As a percentage of:                    

                   |Total    |All      |All                

                   |number   |privately|rented             

                             |rented   |property           

                             |property |per cent.          

                             |per cent.                    

-----------------------------------------------------------

North West England |600      |0.40     |0.07               

United Kingdom     |5,300    |0.31     |0.07               

Maastricht Treaty

Sir Thomas Arnold : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement about the progress made towards achieving the economic objectives listed in article 109 of the EC treaty as proposed in the Maastricht treaty.

Sir John Cope : While the United Kingdom has reserved the right to choose whether or not to participate in the final stage of EMU the Government's policies are designed to ensure that the United Kingdom meets the convergence criteria as listed in article 109 of the Maastricht treaty.

The Government are committed to membership of the exchange rate mechanism and will in due course move to narrow bands at the current central parity of DM2.95. Maintaining sterling within its ERM bands will ensure that United Kingdom inflation will move progressively into line with the best inflation performance of the ERM countries. Long-term interest rates can also be expected to converge with the best ERM countries' performance. Fiscal policy is designed to avoid running deficits that might be judged excessive.


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Benefits and Expenses

Mr. Barry Field : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer when the threshold on P11Ds was last increased ; and what representations he has had to increase them.

Mr. Dorrell : The earnings threshold above which employers must report employees' benefits and expenses payments to the Inland Revenue on form P11D was last increased, to £8,500, from 1979-80. A number of representations have been received suggesting an increase in the P11D threshold.

Mr. Barry Field : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what are the estimated number of tax-payers above the current threshold for P11Ds and below the current threshold for the last available figures.

Mr. Dorrell : It is estimated that in 1992-93 there are some 15.4 million tax-paying employees earning above the £8,500 P11D threshold. There are also 0.8 million tax-paying directors who are subject to the special provisions for taxation of benefits-in-kind whatever the level of their earnings. There are 3.1 million tax-paying employees earning less than the P11D threshold.

Pay and File

Mr. Barry Field : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer on what date he expects to bring into effect pay and file.

Mr. Dorrell : On present plans pay and file will start on 1 October 1993. The new rules will apply to accounting periods ending on or after that date.

Wakefield Valuation Office

Mr. Hinchliffe : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer, pursuant to his answer of 2 June, Official Report, column 400, why neither the Members with constituencies affected, nor the local authority concerned, were consulted prior to or informed subsequent to the closure of the Wakefield valuation office.

Mr. Dorrell : The former Wakefield valuation office covered the local authorities of City of Wakefield metropolitan district council and Barnsley metropolitan borough council. The end of domestic rating caused a reduction of about one fifth of the work of the VO and a reduced network was necessary in order to protect costs.

Both authorities were advised in advance of the closure and arrangements made for the transfer of work to Doncaster valuation office with effect from 30 September 1991.

While the respective Members of Parliament were not directly informed of the closure, a copy of the "Valuation Office Address Book", held in the House of Commons Library, was updated in October 1991 and indicated the transfer of the above local authorities to the Doncaster valuation office.

Financial Services

Mr. Burns : To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement on the transfer of responsibility for financial services from the Department of Trade and Industry to the Treasury.


Column 22

Mr. Lamont : Responsibility for financial services was transferred to the Treasury on 7 June by the Transfer of Functions (Financial Services) Order 1992 which was laid before Parliament on 5 June. The transfer involves the functions and staff of the DTI's financial services division. In essence, these cover responsibility for policy and legislation, and overseeing regulation, in the areas of investment business, collective investment schemes, the issue of securities to the public and investor protection.

The functions transferred include responsibility for the regulatory system under the Financial Services Act 1986 and oversight of the Securities and Investments Board, the Companies Securities (Insider Dealing) Act 1985, and part VII--(financial markets and

insolvency)--and part IX--TAURUS--of the Companies Act 1989 ; EC directives in the financial services sector, (including the draft investment services and capital adequacy directives) ; arrangements with overseas regulators for exchanging information ; encouraging international liberalisation in financial services through the general agreement on tariffs and trade and the organisation for economic co-operation and development ; and for litigation to recover the cost of the Government's ex gratia payments scheme to Barlow Clowes investors.

The DTI will continue to be responsible for the generality of company law ; insolvency matters including the disqualification of directors ; investigations and prosecutions under the Financial Services, Insolvency and Companies Acts ; and for prudential supervision of insurance undertakings, EC insurance directives, insurance interests in the OECD and GATT, and for general questions affecting the insurance industry.

Banking and financial services have become increasingly closely linked, at home and abroad, and this will now be reflected by bringing policy responsibility together in a single Department. No changes are proposed in the way financial services are regulated as a result of the transfer.

ENVIRONMENT

Management Consultants

Mr. Dobson : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment what was the total sum paid out in fees by his Department to management consultants in 1979-80 and in each following year up to and including 1991- 92 ; and what is his estimate for 1992-93.

Mr. Howard : Information relating to the financial years between 1979-80 and 1984-85 inclusive is not readily available and cannot be obtained without disproportionate cost. Following is the information relating to the remaining financial years :


          |£ million          

------------------------------

1985-86   |4.3                

1986-87   |5.0                

1987-88   |5.3                

1988-89   |9.5                

1989-90   |16.3               

1990-91   |10.2               

1991-92   |<1>10.7            

1992-93   |<2>10.6            

<1> Provisional outturn.      

<2> Provisional budget.       

Excludes PSA Services, the    

budget for which    has yet   

to be fixed.                  


Column 23

Waltham Forest HAT

Mr. Gerrard : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment what capital allocations will be made to the Waltham Forest housing action trust ; and by what mechanisms capital spending by the trust will be determined and controlled.

Mr. Baldry : The Waltham Forest housing action trust will be provided with sufficient funding to cover the cost of capital expenditure on its agreed programme. Until its first corporate plan has been produced and agreed with the Department no overall allocation can be made and funding will be provided on a monthly basis against need. In common with other non-departmental public bodies the trust will be financially responsible via its accounting officer acting in accordance with a financial memorandum, management statement and corporate plan, and subject to external audit.

Smoke Alarms

Mr. Janner : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) whether he will issue a circular to local authorities to encourage them to introduce smoke alarms into homes for elderly people ; (2) whether he will introduce legislation to require local authorities to install smoke alarms in all local authority and housing association homes occupied by pensioners.

Mr. Baldry : My Department has no plans to do so, but building regulations now call for the installation of smoke detectors in new dwellings, and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Health is responsible for legislation on types of accommodation for elderly people which, among other things, provides for fire precautions.

Mr. Janner : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment how much his Department has expended on the promotion or installation of smoke alarms in homes for elderly people in each of the last five years for which records are available.

Mr. Peter Lloyd : I have been asked to reply.

Since 1987 the Home Office has conducted a regional and national television advertising campaign promoting smoke alarms. The campaign has sought to increase ownership among all households in England and Wales. In 1990-91 and 1991-92 the Home Office targeted its national television advertising campaign primarily at elderly people. Four million copies of leaflets promoting smoke alarms have been issued by the Home Office. In addition, a leaflet and video promoting general fire safety for elderly people also encourage the installation of smoke alarms.

Costs cannot be apportioned to specific target groups.

There is legislation in place in respect of types of accommodation housing elderly people which, among other things, makes provision for fire precautions. Such legislation is a matter for my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Health.

Opencast Mining

Ms. Walley : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment, pursuant to his answer of 22 May, Official Report, column 269, further to 0273/92/93/(27), if he will list those organisations and individuals who have


Column 24

contributed to his consultation exercise relating to minerals planning guidance 3 as it affects opencast coal mining operators.

Mr. Baldry : My Department has received 58 responses to the consultation exercise. I am placing a list of those who have responded in the Library of the House.

Ms. Walley : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list those planning decisions relating to opencast mining applications which have been called in by his Department in each of the last five years for the Secretary of State's ruling ; and, in each case, whether permission was given or refused, or whether the case has still to be determined.

Mr. Baldry : My Department has called in one planning decision relating to an opencast mining application in the last five years. The application was by the British Coal Corporation for the Smotherfly--revised --opencast coal site in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. It was called in on 8 December 1987, and permission for the development was given on 17 March 1989.

Canary Wharf

Ms. Mowlam : To ask the Secretary for the Environment if it is a prerequisite for accepting any private sector bid for the Canary Wharf project for there to be an agreement from the firm to give financial assistance to the Jubilee line extension.

Mr. Redwood : The terms on which Canary Wharf may be offered for sale are entirely a matter for the administrator appointed to manage Olympia and York's affairs in the United Kingdom.

Mr. Sheldon : To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if, when considering any possible move to Canary Wharf he will take into account the cost of London weighting allowance and compare total costs of such a move to those of dispersing to other regions of the United Kingdom.


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