Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to amend section 5 of the Gas Act 1986; and for connected purposes |
---|---|
Citation | 1993 c. 1 |
Introduced by | Lord Cochrane of Cults on 8 July 1992 (Second Reading) (Lords) |
Territorial extent | Great Britain, excluding Northern Ireland |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 19 January 1993 |
Commencement | 31 October 1994 |
Other legislation | |
Amends | Gas Act 1986 |
Amended by | Gas Act 1995 |
Status: Amended |
The Gas (Exempt Supplies) Act 1993 (c. 1) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which amended the prohibition on certain unauthorised gas supplies and amended the duties of the Director General of Gas Supply.
The Gas Act 1986, which had privatised the British gas industry, had been focussed on large suppliers of gas. [1] The associated bureaucracy and regulation costs were an impediment to smaller suppliers. These included suppliers of LPG (liquified petroleum gas, comprising butane and propane). [2] The Gas (Exempt Supplies) Bill had started as a Private Members Bill in the House of Lords and was intended to remove the prohibition on unauthorised supply of gas from smaller operators. [2]
The Gas (Exempt Supplies) Act 1993 received royal assent on 19 January 1993. Its long title is ‘An Act to amend section 5 of the Gas Act 1986; and for connected purposes.’
The Act comprises four sections: [3]
Sections 1 and 2 of this Act were repealed by Section 17 of the Gas Act 1995. Effective from 1 March 1996. [4]
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