Western Morning News

If we don’t respect nature we’ll pay price

- Michael Newman Cheltenham

WHILE the planning shake-up proposed by the Government may sound fine on a first reading, it risks providing a developers’ charter.

Sidelining councils may not be the best way of going about things. Often, the troops on the ground know best. And while designatin­g every piece of land in the country for growth, renewal or protection may seem fine, it presuppose­s that every piece of land in need of protection is already protected.

This is not the case. Most worrying of all is the proposal to increase building in the Cotswolds by 148%. And what has produced this figure – wait for it – an algorithm! We have seen from A-level exam results how wildly inaccurate this device can be.

All that will happen is that huge swathes of the countrysid­e will be gobbled up to produce unaffordab­le housing in beauty spots. And rural communitie­s would still lack the affordable housing they need!

I do approve of the plan to make every new street tree-lined. More carefully thought out, the shake-up in general could prove beneficial.

But remember, the CPRE has identified sufficient brownfield sites for one million new houses.

In addition, there are 600,000 houses in England lying empty (National Homeless Alliance) and 400,000 houses for which planning permission has been granted, but of which not a brick has been laid (House Builders’ Federation).

So there is no need of a mass plundering of green fields.

During the pandemic, many people have experience­d the benefits of connecting with nature. Not just in the exercise of a daily walk, but in the mental well-being that a greener life makes possible. And scientific research has exposed the link between deforestat­ion and the growth of zoonotic diseases such as Covid-19. If we do not respect nature, we will pay a price, as in the bush fires in Australia, and the melting ice floes of the Arctic.

But nature has helped many of us through a bad time. We have learnt to identify birdsong or wild flowers or trees. Nature is no longer in the background, but a daily inspiratio­n.

And yet developers are still encouraged to ravage green acres when there brownfield sites crying out for developmen­t. Incursions into the green belt are becoming commonplac­e in North-West Gloucester­shire. Have the planners learnt nothing? Little things. Only a few trees here, a couple of green fields there. Won’t matter – it isn’t the Rain Forest. Well, it does matter. And who can make a difference?

You can. Is swelling the profits of developers more important than mental welfare? Concreting over England’s green and pleasant land may seem a developer’s dream.

For the rest of us, it would be a nightmare. And I don’t think I could vote for a Government that allowed this. The environmen­t matters.

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