Freedom of Information Request vs Environmental Information Request
Understanding the difference between an FOI request (FOIA 2000) and an EIR request (EIR 2004), and which to use for information about environmental matters.
Overview
The Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) and the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 (EIR) both give the public the right to request information from public authorities, but they operate under different regimes, have different exemptions, and different procedural rules. Choosing the right route โ or citing both โ can significantly affect the outcome of your request.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA)
Pros
- Wide scope โ covers any recorded information held by public authorities
- No requirement to justify the request โ requests can be made anonymously
- 20 working day response deadline โ well-defined and enforced by the ICO
- Right of internal review and complaint to the ICO if dissatisfied
Cons
- Exemptions are numerous โ commercial interests, national security, personal data, legal privilege, and more
- Some exemptions are absolute; others are subject to a public interest test
- Covers only recorded information โ not verbal communications
- Does not cover all bodies โ private companies and some hybrid bodies are excluded
Best For
Requests for government policy documents, internal reports, spending data, meeting minutes, correspondence, and non-environmental public authority information.
Environmental Information Regulations 2004 (EIR)
Pros
- Applies to 'environmental information' broadly defined โ air, water, land, biodiversity, energy, emissions, planning decisions, contamination
- Extends to private companies exercising public functions relating to the environment (e.g. water companies, some utilities)
- Exceptions are narrower than FOIA exemptions โ all are subject to a public interest test
- Duty to proactively disseminate environmental information
Cons
- Narrower subject matter โ only 'environmental information' as defined by reg.2
- Same 20 working day deadline as FOIA but authorities sometimes blur the boundary
- The definition of 'environmental information' can be contested
Best For
Requests for planning decisions, contamination reports, emissions data, water quality reports, flood risk assessments, nature conservation decisions, and environmental impact assessments.
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
If your request is for environmental information, use the EIR (or cite both FOIA and EIR in your request) โ the EIR exceptions are generally narrower and all subject to the public interest test, giving you stronger rights. If the authority tries to apply FOIA exemptions to what is clearly environmental information, challenge this in your internal review request and complaint to the ICO. Many requesters cite both regimes as a precaution.