The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 27 tabled · 27 answered

Written questions by Rutland.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Tom Rutland this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (27)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (7)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (4)Department of Health and Social Care (3)Cabinet Office (2)Department for Business and Trade (2)Department for Transport (2)Home Office (2)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (2)Treasury (1)Department for Education (1)Ministry of Justice (1)

Showing 12 of 2 · Department for Business and Trade

30 Apr 2025·Department for Business and Trade·Answered
Asked

What steps his Department is taking to ensure international companies exporting into the UK are held to the same (a) quality and (b) safety regulations as domestic (i) manufacturers and (ii) sellers.

Reply

Product safety regulations set requirements for the safety of consumer products placed on the UK market. Importers must ensure their products comply and distributors must not supply products that they know, or should know, are dangerous.The Office for Product Safety and Standards and local authority regulators enforce the law. They use data and intelligence to target enforcement activity at dangerous and non-compliant products at the border.The Government’s Product Regulation and Metrology Bill will provide powers to further strengthen our product safety framework and update it to reflect modern supply chains, including through new, proportionate duties on online marketplaces.

30 Apr 2025·Department for Business and Trade·Answered
Asked

Whether his Department is taking steps to audit overseas factories that import into the UK for the same (a) social and (b) ethical compliance standards applied to domestic manufacturers.

Reply

The UK supports voluntary due diligence approaches taken by UK businesses to identify and prevent exploitation of workers and prevent environmental harms across their operations and supply chains, in line with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. To promote the OECD Guidelines, the UK also operates an independent UK National Contact Point (NCP). The UK NCP engages bilaterally and multilaterally with the 51 other NCPs around the world, to ensure a consistent application, awareness and understanding of the OECD Guidelines.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.