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This document provides information and comprehensive lists of the various codes you might need when completing your pollution inventory submission. For full guidance, you should refer to the pollution inventory general guidance and additional guidance relevant to your sector.
NACE (nomenclature for economic activities) Coder is a pan-European classification system that groups organisations according to their business activities. The codes are defined in the International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 4 (2008) (ISIC Rev. 4).
Codes comprise four digits (for example, 01.11). The first two define the Division of economic activity. The third digit defines a sub-group within that division. The final digit defines the activity Class within that group.
In the following lists, we have given the NACE code and the activity description. In brackets is the corresponding code in ISIC Rev.4. An asterisk denotes that the ISIC code is used by more than one activity.
Sites that are required to report to PRTR (the pollutant release and transfer register) must also provide a code relevant to their industrial sector. The codes comprise a number to indicate the sector and a letter to indicate your specific primary process.
(ii) for the smelting, including the alloying, of non-ferrous metals, including recovered products (refining, foundry casting and so on): with a melting capacity of 4 tonnes per day for lead and cadmium or 20 tonnes per day for all other metals
When submitting your pollution inventory return, we ask for a method code to describe how the results were obtained. We have provided a list of generic and substance-specific monitoring methods which may be of use.
Wastes must be classified by the European Waste Catalogue (EWC) 6-digit codes and by the relevant Waste Framework Directive disposal or recovery codes (D&R). In this section we have provided a link to the EWC and listed the D&R codes.
For QRTs (Quantitative Reporting Templates) is requested to provide the NACE code (Issuer Sector).
I would like to know where to find the NACE code full list. Is it the NACE published by the Europa.eu ( -project-nace-codes-list-rev-2).
NACE is the acronym used to designate the various statistical classifications of economic activities developed since 1970 in the European Union. NACE provides the framework for collecting and presenting a large range of statistical data according to economic activity in the fields of economic statistics (e.g. production, employment, national accounts) and in other statistical domains. They are published via a EC Regulation.
The Regulation (EC) 1893/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 December 2006 establishing NACE Rev. 2 was adopted in December 2006. It includes provisions for the implementation of NACE Rev. 2 and coordinated transition from NACE Rev. 1.1 to NACE Rev. 2 in various statistical domains. NACE Rev. 2 is to be used, in general, for statistics referring to economic activities performed from 1 January 2008 onwards (Article 8 of the NACE Regulation provides details on implementation).
To contribute to the stability and effectiveness of the European financial system, the EBA develops harmonised rules for financial institutions, promotes convergence of supervisory practices, monitors, and advises on the impact of financial innovation and the transition to sustainable finance.
To ensure the orderly functioning and stability of the financial system in the European Union, we monitor and analyse risks and vulnerabilities relevant for the regulation of banks and investment firms. We also facilitate information sharing among authorities and institutions through supervisory reporting and data disclosure.
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It is not mandatory to include all of these NACE sectors listed under Template 3, nevertheless these shall be all taken into account, when determining the final subsectors to be disclosed in column (b).
The level of the NACE codes used for a particular subsector shall be determined by its materiality, based on the related exposures to be disclosed in column (c). In case a subsector represented by a level 4 NACE code considered to be material on its own, then the institution shall disclose that level 4 NACE code in the template for that alignment metric. In case a subsector only considered to be material once the related exposures are aggregated under the level 2 NACE code, the institution shall use that level of NACE code for that particular subsector.
When determining the relevant subsectors for the template, taking into account the abovementioned materiality approach for the metrics, institutions are not required to allocate exposures exclusively to only one NACE code or only to one specific level of NACE code within the same sector. For example, if NACE code 6 considered to be material, but at the same time NACE code 610 also considered to be material on its own, they shall be disclosed in separate rows and exposures under NACE code 610 shall be also included under NACE code 6. The institution may use such a graphic expression in column (b), from which it is clear, that exposures under NACE code 610 are subordinated to exposures under NACE code 6.
The Q&A refers to the provisions in force on the day of their publication. The EBA does not systematically review published Q&As following the amendment of legislative acts. Users of the Q&A tool should therefore check the date of publication of the Q&A and whether the provisions referred to in the answer remain the same.
Our mission is to contribute to the stability and effectiveness of the European financial system through simple, consistent, transparent, fair regulation and supervision that benefits all EU citizens.
This search tool looks for words or part of words that are contained in the title of the case or the company/organisation name. The more complete you type the name in, the more the search will be accurate, especially for composed names. If you type more than one word, the search engine will retrieve cases that contain all words in the title.
NACE Rev 2 is the Statistical classification of economic activities in the European Community (see full list of NACE codes).
Click on "Select" to obtain the NACE code selection tree; from there you can select a major category and all subcategories or expand the list by clicking on the corresponding "+" sign to select one or more sub-categories only.
Select this option if you look for a word contained in the document or in the press release title. For example, the word "statement" may find out all the cases where the Commission confirmed sending a statement of objections; "statement" being indicated in the title of press releases.
Am looking for a simple list of the NACE 2008 rev 2 codes (The European classifications for economic sectors). The official publication is here, but is there an easily accessible list of the actual codes available anywhere?
Each EU Member State follows this list, while being free to add more detail if they wish. Belgium has its own NACEBEL list, the latest version of which is available (in French) on StatBel. This list is very long since it includes a specific code for all possible activities.
Every self-employed individual or company can check their own NACEBEL codes via the BCE/KBO Public Search tool or in the My Enterprise section of the FPS Economy website.
When registering your Hungarian company, you should also indicate its main activity. You do not simply state what you are planning to do: there is an official list, accepted by all EU countries, and you select the item that suits your planned activity the most. Each activity has a numeric ID, which is called their NACE code.
NACE is a classification system of things a company can do, created in 1970 to be used internationally to make economic statistics comparable by country. Its latest version was published in 2008, and it is currently used all over the European Union.
To reflect the classification, NACE uses codes to describe activities in a top-down fashion: first you consider the main area, and then you narrow it down. The full NACE code of an activity consists of one letter and 4 numbers.
At the same time, the NACE code does not have to be indicated on your invoices. You can also issue invoices even for activities you have not signed up for previously. However, if you see that you will create many invoices for a given activity, it makes sense to add that activity to your company data. While neither the Tax Authority (NAV) nor the Central Statistical Office (KSH) will follow invoice by invoice how much revenue you made for each activity, KSH will ask you once a year to indicate your approximate revenue for each activity.
When you set up bank your corporate bank account, the bank will also ask about your activities. When you are filling out their form, it also makes sense to think in the terms of NACE codes. This way you give the bank information that is more easily digestible, while also indicating that you know what you are talking about, proving that you are a trustworthy and reliable partner.
The EMAS register is an online database hosted by the European Commission which lists all EMAS registered organisations and sites. Only those organisations and sites that have achieved EMAS registration are listed in the register, so you can feel confident that organisations found there are committed to improving their environmental performance.
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