John craven

2 min read

DOES NEW HOUSING HAVE TO PUT WATERWAYS AT RISK?

COUNTRYFILE ISSUES

Many years ago, long before current housing regulations, I lived in a new-build home on an estate with a stream flowing past our small front garden. All rather idyllic apart from when, after heavy rain, the sound of water surging over large stones kept me awake at night.

It never crossed my mind that the charming stream could be a potential conduit of pollution. But that was half a century ago, before the world became aware of threats to our natural environment.

In more recent years, the EU, concerned with the impact of sewage leakage and construction site runoff, restricted housebuilding anywhere near waterways in protected areas. Developers in 62 local authority areas from Cornwall to the north-east have to prove their schemes will be “nutrient neutral”. This means ensuring no additional nutrients, such as phosphates and nitrates that can damage water quality, create excess algae and harm wildlife, would be released into local watercourses. Developers claim, as a result, building work has lagged behind targets.

In recent weeks, though, the Government decided to scrap what Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called a “disproportionate and poorly targeted old EU ruling” in the hope that an extra 100,000 homes could be created by 2030, starting within months and giving an £18 billion boost to the economy. The EU ruling would instead become “guidance” to housebuilders, who applauded the move. But, with filthy rivers such a major issue and those who pollute them facing mounting public criticism, protests grew.

Greenpeace’s Doug Parr retorted: “Who would look at our sickly, sewage-infested rivers and conclude that what they need is weaker pollution rules?” Ali Morse, water policy manager of the Wildlife Trusts, told me: “We know that nutrient neutrality schemes work. Protecting rivers does not hold up housebuilding – it is entirely possible to provide homes people need while also stopping river pollution from worsening.”

In a bid to speed up homebuilding, the Government is trying to scrap rules that require developers to protect wat

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles