National Contaminated Land Officers Group
The voice for Contaminated Land Officers in the UK
Supporting Land Contamination Officers
The National Contaminated Land Officers Group (NCLOG) is a member-led, specialist interest group and is part of the Environmental Policy Implementation Community (EPIC). NCLOG members are Contaminated Land Officers (CLOs) working in local authorities.
The community works together to act as the national voice for CLOs in the UK and to promote high-quality and consistent regulation and management of land contamination across the sector. We provide a home for CLOs to share ideas and knowledge, support members through developing guidance and resources and provide peer support to individual CLOs, who may be the sole individuals dealing with land contamination in their Council.
NCLOG has over 200 members across the UK and has strong links with regional Contaminated Land Officer Groups (CLOGs) and those in the devolved administrations.
Joining NCLOG
Membership of NCLOG is exclusively open to local authority professionals working in land contamination, on an individual rather than an employer basis.
Individuals wishing to join NCLOG must join the Environmental Policy Implementation Community (EPIC) and select additional NCLOG membership. EPIC membership is open to all local authority environmental professionals, regardless of whether they are IES members.
NCLOG FAQs
The concept of a National Contaminated Land Officers Group was developed in 2018 by Anita Metelko, Ann Barker, Julia Reynolds and Sarah Greenhough, CLOs from the West Midlands, Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. A survey of CLOs confirmed that there was a large appetite across the UK to form a national body.
NCLOG was launched in 2019 at the Molineux Stadium in Wolverhampton. The Interim Steering Committee established the initial governance of NCLOG, setting up a membership application system and contacting CLOGs across the UK. The work of NCLOG began in earnest at this time with regular events and consultation responses. NCLOG activities were restricted during the Covid-19 pandemic, but by 2021 the organisation was developing apace and had become the ‘go to’ organisation for those wishing to engage with CLOs; running training events and webinars, presenting at conferences and publishing guidance. NCLOG has continued to maintain close links with CLOGs, as well as working closely with government and other key stakeholders, and is represented on the National Brownfield Forum.
NCLOG joined the IES family in January 2025 to continue to develop its operations, reach and influence, and support collaboration across environmental professional communities.