Housebuilding adds to the nutrient pollution already affecting our rivers and coasts in both England and Wales– lots of extra people flushing toilets means lots of extra sewage. In a ‘Brexit Bonus’ for housing developers, Rishi Sunak’s UK Government has announced plans to weaken the rules that prevent pollution of some of our most important wildlife sites.
The UK Government will use the England-only Levelling-Up Bill, currently passing through the UK Parliament. This will seek to weaken the Habitats Regulations (the rules protecting internationally important wildlife sites including rivers) which apply to England and Wales. Now, when local authorities consider planning applications, they must ‘assume that nutrients in urban wastewater from the potential development… will not adversely affect the relevant site.’ This means that the requirement to offset wastewater pollution will no longer be required after housebuilders in England complained that the pollution-limiting requirements were ‘costly and time-consuming.’
But claims that these rules created a ‘housing moratorium’ are disingenuous. In England, the UK Government, Local Authorities and others have already established schemes that allow developers to pay to offset the nutrients by reducing other sources of water pollution locally, meaning that the development would be ‘nutrient-neutral’ on balance. This nitrate trading has meant planning permissions have been granted, safe in the knowledge that the new housing nitrates would not increase water pollution. But these protections are set to be scrapped.