The Guardian (USA)

England brings in biodiversi­ty rules to force builders to compensate for loss of nature

- Phoebe Weston

England is launching a biodiversi­ty credit scheme this week that attempts to force all new road and housebuild­ing projects to benefit nature, rather than damage it.

The “nature market”, called biodiversi­ty net gain (BNG), means all new building projects must achieve a 10% net gain in biodiversi­ty or habitat. If a woodland is destroyed by a road, for example, another needs to be recreated. This can happen either on site or elsewhere.

The requiremen­t becomes law under the Town and Country Planning Act on 12 February for larger sites, and on 2 April 2024 for smaller sites.

The scheme will make people think about how to minimise and mitigate the ecosystem impact of new developmen­ts, said Natalie Duffus, a biology and geographer researcher from the University of Oxford, who analysed the impact of BNG trials on conservati­on. “In theory, it could restore lots of habitats,” she added.

The government has a target of building 300,000 new homes a year by the mid-2020s. Land affected by those developmen­ts must be compensate­d for under the new rules.

Internatio­nally, “it’s one of the most ambitious schemes we’ve seen”, said Duffus. “Other places are watching us and seeing how it unfolds. If done well I think it could inspire a lot of other markets to develop in different countries.”

Those already hoping to copy the idea or use it to develop their own include Sweden, Singapore, Scotland and

Wales, she said.

Sophus zu Ermgassen, an ecological economist from the University of Oxford, said England’s scheme is “world-leading in its scope” in that it addresses all new constructi­on, and covers all natural habitats. “Other offset policies around the world have either a wealth of exemptions or deal with one specific set of impacts,” he said.

One major shortfall for biodiversi­ty markets around the world is a lack of demand. To date, only $8m (£6.5m) has been committed or pledged for biodiversi­ty credits worldwide. Globally, funding for biodiversi­ty is $169bn annually, most of which comes from domestic public funding. It needs to increase to $200bn from all sources (public, private, domestic and internatio­nal) by 2030, according to the UN.

“Demand for biodiversi­ty credits, or offsets, is really limited unless there is some sort of fundamenta­l driver,” zu Ermgassen said, adding that having a mandatory market for all developers helps these things scale up and draw in more investment and activity than they would otherwise.

BNG is regulated by several bodies, including local authoritie­s and government agencies. This is seen a strength of the scheme, as it avoids the problem of “marking your own homework” associated with voluntary markets.

However, regulators lack the staff to check the pledged habitat benefits actually materialis­e. Zu Ermgassen was part of a study that found that more than a quarter of BNG units are at risk of leading to no tangible increases in biodiversi­ty because there is no monitoring system in place. There are also concerns that there are too few ecologists to oversee habitats or score them correctly. Some may lack independen­ce if they are employed by the developer.

Tom Oliver, a professor of applied ecology at the University of Reading, said environmen­tal regulation­s are typically let down by lax enforcemen­t. “BNG’s success hinges on effective environmen­tal regulation, monitoring and policing, and yet when you look at all our past case studies they clearly show a failure of environmen­tal enforcemen­t and policing,” he said. “You’re putting in a new approach that relies on mechanisms working when they don’t.”

Much of the off-site habitat restoratio­n demanded by the scheme – including the creation and protection of wetlands, wildflower meadows or woodlands – is expected to happen on farmland. However, there may also be a lack of farmers signing up, as it is not clear how big the market will be.

Ben Taylor, the manager of Iford Estate farm near Lewes in East Sussex, said betting on this emerging market is “crystal ball stuff”, with many farmers hesitant to take the financial risk.

However, Amanda Williams, the head of environmen­tal sustainabi­lity at the Chartered Institute of Building, said it is good the legislatio­n has been launched after a number of delays.

“Looking into the future, the current BNG legislatio­n does not address constructi­on’s full impact on nature as it excludes the production and processing of constructi­on materials, such as timber and sand, and minerals including gravel, iron ore and rocks, and how they affect biodiversi­ty,” she said. “This is something that in time will need to be addressed.”

In the past decade, more private players have been entering the nature-conservati­on space, and the internatio­nal voluntary biodiversi­ty credit markets is growing.

“The very first trades are starting to happen in these markets, it is super early days,” said zu Ermgassen. “There is no universall­y agreed standard, there are no universall­y agreed anything – it’s very much the piloting and innovating phase of that system.”

The private sector is increasing­ly becoming a source of finance for biodiversi­ty credits, but government­s must provide the resources to fund biodiversi­ty, according to research by the Campaign for Nature.

“Fundamenta­lly, it is critical that our government­s start to recognise biodiversi­ty as the public good that it is, like law enforcemen­t or defence,” said the lobby group’s report. “Public goods must be funded by government­s or incorporat­ed into private investment decision-making through public policy, regulation­s and incentives.”

 ?? ?? Dillington Carr, a site of special scientific interest in Norfolk and part of the Wendling Beck pilot BNG environmen­t project. Photograph: Courtesy of Wendling Beck Environmen­t project
Dillington Carr, a site of special scientific interest in Norfolk and part of the Wendling Beck pilot BNG environmen­t project. Photograph: Courtesy of Wendling Beck Environmen­t project
 ?? Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian ?? Flooded fields on Iford Estate farm in East Sussex, one of five farms selected as a pilot project for the biodiversi­ty net gain scheme.
Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian Flooded fields on Iford Estate farm in East Sussex, one of five farms selected as a pilot project for the biodiversi­ty net gain scheme.

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