Last week, the UK Government tabled amendments to the Planning and Infrastructure Bill in the House of Lords to introduce safeguards for nature it claims would prevent existing environmental protections being weakened.
The proposed changes come after months of campaigning by environmental organisations, including Suffolk Wildlife Trust members and supporters, and seek to address aspects of the bill that the Office for Environmental Protection described as ‘environmentally regressive’ – i.e. weakening legal environmental protections.
While the amendments do improve the safeguards for nature in some key areas – for example, strengthening the requirement for evidence that ‘Environmental Delivery Plans’ will deliver an ‘overall material improvement’ for the environmental feature in question – they still leave the door open for development to do potentially avoidable harm to nature without having to pay the full cost of delivering measures to mitigate / compensate for that harm.
[1 EDPs are the central mechanism proposed in Part 3 of the bill for mitigating environmental impacts ‘strategically’, i.e. in a different location from where those impacts occur, funded by developers paying a ‘Nature Restoration Levy’.]