Scrapping of EU pollution rules to unlock 140,000 homes

Aaron Morby 9 months ago
Share

House builders have welcomed the government’s plan to scrap nutrient neutrality rules that have stalled construction of thousands of new homes.

Gove to sweep away nutrient neutrality rules to boost house building
Gove to sweep away nutrient neutrality rules to boost house building

Currently, legacy EU laws on nutrient neutrality are blocking the delivery of new homes, including cases where planning permission has already been granted.

Announcing plans to scrap the ‘defective’ EU laws, Levelling Up, Housing and Communities secretary, Michael Gove said: “The way EU rules have been applied has held us back.

“These changes will provide a multi-billion pound boost for the UK economy and see us build more than 100,000 new homes.”

To mitigate the impact of the move the Government pledged to double investment to £280m in the Nutrient Mitigation Scheme run by Natural England.

It said this would offset the very small amount of additional nutrient discharge attributable to up to 100,000 homes between now and 2030.

The funding is targetted at reducing runoff from agriculture and plans to upgrade waste water treatment works through conventional upgrades, catchment approaches and nature-based solutions.

It is expected that developers could begin construction on these homes in a matter of months.

HBF executive chairman Stewart Baseley said: “We estimated more than 145,000 new build homes have been blocked from being built because of Natural England’s disproportionate moratorium on housebuilding in more than a quarter of local authority areas, from Cornwall to the Tees Valley.

“This is very welcome news.”

Richard Beresford, chief executive of the National Federation of Builders, said: “The Government has been getting the nutrient neutrality strategy wrong for five years and therefore it is correct that they reassess their approach.

“Despite house building not being the major polluter and implementing many strategies, we have been bending over backwards to reduce pollution.

“We hope this is the start of a process which fixes the pollution issue and doesn’t disproportionately blame and tax the housebuilding industry.”

Latest news

Tilbury Douglas clears Interserve legacy jobs to return to profit

Revenue tops £500m in first year as standalone contractor
43 mins ago

Skills shortage puts big infrastructure projects at risk

Government failing as an intelligent client and now over-reliant on consultancies
4 hours ago

Contractors face further insulation board price hikes

Cost of PIR insulation boards set to rise another 10%
4 hours ago

Henry Boot wins £36m Rotherham Markets job

Project involves upgrading existing market and building a new library
5 hours ago

Keltbray hires new head of infrastructure procurement

Lukasz Olszewski will oversee rail, energy and highways business units
5 hours ago

Tunnel fit out robot to revolutionise civils work

Costain and VVB Engineering part of innovative consortium
5 hours ago

Funding deal for £86m wind turbine test centre

Latest investment at National Renewable Energy Centre in Blyth
21 hours ago

Plan in for Manchester ‘upside-down’ 18-storey tower

Landmark cantilevered NXQ building plan for city Northern Quarter
1 day ago

London 25km Super Sewer hooked up for commissioning

Tideway completes connection to existing Lee Tunnel sewer system
1 day ago

£200m Lincoln ring-road approved

North Hykeham Relief Road granted planning permission
1 day ago

£1bn Manchester Airport City plan rebooted as new sci-tech hub

Plan pivots from offices to science and manufacturing campus, called MIX Manchester
2 days ago

Record results at maintenance specialist Renew

Infrastructure maintenance work continues to pay off for contractor
1 day ago

Barhale lands £21m shaft scheme for Thames Water

Civils specialist bags latest upgrade deal on Thames Water Ring Main
1 day ago

Caddick names new north east director

Former Laing O'Rourke project lead joins Yorkshire contractor
1 day ago

Mount Anvil wins London Camden estate rebuild

Deverloper wins £133m Bacton Phase 2 development in Gospel Oak
2 days ago

London Met Uni seeks firm for £280m estate upgrade

A single partner contractor will deliver 10-year building upgrade plan
2 days ago

Top 30 M&E contractors set for growth – ranking

Growth in data centres and commercial refits creates optimism for year ahead
2 days ago

Race starts for £17m Leicester station redevelopment

City Council aims to restore historic Victoria building
2 days ago

Plant bosses blast “inflexible” police over road bans

Officers spotted outside sites and depots monitoring movements of large kit
5 days ago

Waterproofing firm Pudlo rescued from administration

New owners take on business while sister firm Cemfree sold to SigmaRoc
2 days ago

Construction recovery rained-off in first quarter

Sharp rise in commercial orders offers hope for Summer recovery
5 days ago

Skanska tops April contract wins ranking

London office and data centre projects lift Skanska
5 days ago

Modular builder TopHat managing director departs

Andrew Shepherd leaves Goldman-Sachs backed volumetric business
6 days ago

Balfour wins major Rolls-Royce Derby campus expansion

Masterplan involving 14 building projects will take eight years to complete
5 days ago

Graham nets £60m stands revamp at Lord’s

Construction to start this summer at the home of cricket
6 days ago

Contractors face mental health quiz to win work

Prequalification specialist pushing for mental health questions in assessments
5 days ago

Building boss banned for covid loan abuse

Latest investigation into £50,000 Bounce Back Loan
5 days ago

Ready mix concrete giant files administration notice

Mixit Concrete Limited lodges court notice
6 days ago

Dual student towers plan for Birmingham Gun Quarter

Sama Investments goes to public consultation on 50-storey scheme
6 days ago

15 win £3.5bn Eastern Route Partnership railway deal

Amco, BAM, Morgan Sindall and Story among winners on Eastern Routes Partnership
6 days ago

Contractor services