Rivers in crisis
The Government’s proposed amendments to the Levelling Up Bill will provide a means of weakening our strongest environmental protections – the Habitats Regulations. These regulations protect our most precious nature sites like the Somerset levels, Norfolk Broads, fragile chalk streams and internationally important wetlands.
Astonishingly, these changes will require Local Authorities, when making planning decisions, to assume that developments will not damage protected sites – despite their better judgement and own knowledge. Just as bad, Local Authorities will be obliged to ignore any evidence that suggests otherwise (including, for example, evidence from Government’s own advisors Natural England).
The Government watchdog, the Office for Environmental Protection has warned that these changes “would demonstrably reduce the level of environmental protection provided for in existing environmental law. They are a regression.”
The new proposals contradict key principles in environmental law – that a precautionary approach should be taken to avoid damage to our most important wildlife sites, and that where harm does occur, the polluter should pay. The measures that Government wants to rely on instead of legal protections are neither sufficient nor secure, and will see taxpayers (and the environment) picking up the bill, whilst developers enjoy an easier ride, and increased profits.
The proposed removal of river protections has come after much industry lobbying. But claims that this is necessary because the rules created a ‘housing moratorium’ are highly exaggerated. Nutrient neutrality schemes established by Local Authorities and by Natural England, working with local providers, have offset the pollution that new homes would cause, and enabled housebuilding to go ahead. Removing pollution rules places the wildlife of these special places at risk, and flies in the face of the evidence that schemes across the country show development doesn’t have to come at the expense of our rivers.
Several Wildlife Trusts have worked on projects to reduce pollution across river catchments for nutrient neutrality schemes that unlock new housebuilding.