England publishes land use framework requiring 7% of land for nature and renewables
Change
England published its first national land use framework requiring about 7% of land be allocated to nature, forestry and renewable energy and introducing a 'default yes' for housing developments sited within walking distance of existing train stations.
Why it matters
The framework forces planning decisions to prioritise locations and land uses that meet national environmental targets, narrowing options for greenfield housing away from rail-linked sites. Owners of parcels mapped as higher priority for peatland, wetland or forestry restoration will face requirements to re-evaluate and potentially change current agricultural or other uses.
Implications
- — Housebuilders' planning and design teams must include ponds, wetlands and improved urban drainage schemes in new developments to align proposals with the framework's development requirements, or their proposals will not meet the framework's stated expectations.
- — Farmers and land managers with parcels identified as peatland, wetland or forestry priority must review the framework mapping and prepare revised land-management plans where advised, or those parcels will be treated as candidates for restoration under the national allocation.
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