29 February 2016

Big Bad Offsetting

The Government has published it's Biodiversity Offsetting paper at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/biodiversity-offsetting

I think we need to refresh our minds and ask ourselves what and who is driving this. Biodiversity Offsetting is largely driven by developers and not environmental managers. Their motivation is to build at the cheapest cost, greatest profit, as all developers make money before products. The things that drive development are issues such as population, a growing population leads to increased need for infrastructure and housing and the most profitable way to do that is on previously undeveloped land.

Land is finite, there is fixed supply, unless we consider the Netherlands in which case you can occasionally steal some land from the sea. As a rule though land is finite, as developers relentlessly gobble up green land the net area for offsetting reduces and the connectivity of habitats diminished. This damage to habitats at the point of development serves to weaken buffering habitats, devaluing their ecological capacity and coincidently making them viable for development as they become degraded habitats. So the question is when do you stop? Eventually a situation will arise when the offsetting land becomes viable to develop and then where does one offset the previous offset? Over time and after much habitat destruction has taken place the whole concept becomes unsustainable. It’s a thin end of a very bad wedge. As an environmentalist I don’t like the idea of anything being unsustainable. So why are we encouraging a non-sustainable proposal? To say that development is minimal because we have so much other land in the UK ignores other demands on the finite resource. The more I look at a hectare of land the more I see a huge array of demands placed on it; housing, roads, rail, agriculture, forestry, wind farms, solar panels, recreation, sport etc etc. I call it the hectored hectare and as more green field is lost these pressures amplify. We already don’t have enough land.


And should we not be considering that in ever increasingly growing society (both population and needs) that poor quality green space on the urban fringe has a greater value than a SSSI on Shetland? Therefore offsetting needs to fully consider the loss of common, even pest, species from the communities that enjoy the occasional glimpse of a grey squirrel robbing a magpie’s nest! The offsetting should be proportional to the availability of green space particularly in urban settings.


Why are we being led by the developers? Surely we as environmentalists should not be responding defensively to proposals that are developer led. Are we no longer creatively able to lead? There appears to be no alternatives other than the continued and unsustainable loss of green land. I live in a place where there is a derelict mill, left there now for many many years, meanwhile I sit on the local plan committee trying to ‘accommodate’ the need for more housing and the only development that has taken place is on green field. Green field development should be taxed at a rate that stimulates re-use of buildings and brown field. That is the alternative way at looking at Offsetting.  To quote Dieter Helm; “[development of green belts] simply compares and contrasts what exists with a proposed development and concludes that because what is can be poor environmental and amenity value, that therefore inevitably concludes it will not be a great loss to concrete over it. This is bad economics and bad planning – and very bad environmental policy.”

03 August 2015

Greenbelt Development

Again just a brief blog to share some figures with you about the UK Governments attempts to meet their manifesto statement of being the greenest government ever.

As many appreciate land not built on carries out essential functions for everyone in Britain for example it provides food, pollinators*, flood mitigation, carbon storage, cooling of urban areas etc etc.

Living on a crowded island you know that there is not much room and therefore to lose the functions of green land in all it's form is actually to increase management costs to the taxpayer in to the future and probably in perpetuity in terms of flood management, health, climate mitigation and so on.

People keep saying there is a housing shortage but I have NEVER seen any statistics on this, but the Government bought what the private developers have said and claimed. Greenbelt land will always be a developers choice. Greenbelt connects with urban services and therefore it is cheaper to build on and is attractive to market as it sits in a semi-rural area, which is a huge irony.

So to the stats:

In 2009-2010 there were 2,258 planning permissions granted for housing on greenbelt land.

2014-15 that figure on greenbelt loss rose to 11,977 (for some reason, probably greed led, developers are getting approvals but not building as construction is flat in the UK).

Government say building on greenbelt should be in 'exceptional circumstance'.

Government will say local authorities have the decision making power as to where homes should be built through Neighbourhood Plans, but let's be honest here, Neighbourhood Plans are just a cover for ill consider decisions forced by the building and construction lobby.

Government said the most treasured and protected land will be restricted when it comes to new build. North Wessex Downs area of Outstanding Natural Beauty has proposals for 1,400 new homes for example.

Much of the data here comes from File on 4 but the most telling quote comes from Hugh Ellis, Head of Policy at the Town and Country Planning Association who is quoted as saying 'I think overall planning can be best described as being very broken [and since 1945] planning has [not] been as demoralised, as underfunded and lacking in strategic guidance as it is now'. He suggests Government take no strategic stance, nor leadership in planning.

We effectively live in an era of willingly uncontrolled and profit led development.

*You will also note that the UK Government, the greenest ever, is allowing crops that kill pollinators to be planted in Autumn 2015.

09 July 2015

New Environmental Contracts

A brief blog, an observation on our present Government Manifesto promise:

"over the next five years, we will put in place strong protections for our natural landscapes" and "we will protect the green belt, and maintain national protection for [statutory protected areas] and other environmental designations.

The reality must be being planned for after HS2 as there will be the direct loss to 27 Ancient Woodlands (an other environmental designation) and indirect damage to 21 other ancient woods (total of 48 lost or damaged).

They should be held more responsible for their manifesto promises. Governments seem very keen to have 'new contracts' with business. Well, isn't it time the environment sector had a new contract with Government?

05 January 2014

The Times, behind the times, but catching up is good. Тајмс, иза времена, али сустиже је добро.



Be Sure to Understand:
This land above has no value socially, culturally, environmentally or aesthetically.
It can, nay must, be forsaken and destroyed for housing and offices.

You have no right to oppose or appeal.
Once developed the UK will PROGRESS!
Once developed it will have a value and you'll be grateful for the banks may smile down upon you!


The noble Times news paper finally awoke to the risks of biodiversity offsetting over the last few days. Glad they could join us. Better late than never. Biodiversity Offsetting is coming to a green field near you and journalists have awoken. 

Of course Owen Patterson was straight out there saying that it would be highly unlikely that Ancient Woodland would be destroyed for development. Well lets take in to consideration:

1. This Government is already deconstructing planning control, so how would they know?

2. The vanity project HS2 will be destroying tens of ancient woodlands.

3. Back in the summer the Government sanctioned 32ha of Ancient Woodland destruction at Oaken Wood in Kent.

4. The Government has said nothing about the proposed motorway service station at Junction 35 of the M1 in Sheffield that would destroy an Ancient Woodland. 

Sorry Owen, your platitudes do not wash, at all. You can not be trusted with the environment, and even if you could be trusted just protecting Ancient Woodland is not good enough. With so many empty properties and brownfield sites there is no excuse for any greenfield loss in any circumstances.

Lord Wilson reckons 92% of the UK is not developed so a loss here, a loss there is not significant. So the implication is that it is fine that developers can roll ahead until the only green space left is SSSI and AONB.....is that a UK you want?

Yet still the Lobbying Bill progresses. Just in case you do want to say what is right for you and your part of the UK the Government will gag you in any case. The Lobbying Bill quite shamelessly seeks to stop those nasty charities and campaign groups from lobbying MP's, yet treats private lobbyist differently, those private sector lobbyist involved in destroying your environment, or involved in the arms trade, or involved in tobacco or alcohol that costs the Governments purse so so so much. These companies can buy in anti-democratic lobbying firms and still access Government, yet Cancer Research, RSPB, RSPCC etc (with all their nasty ways and political bias) would not be able to Lobby! 

The Government seem to think that it's the charities and campaigners who are spending the £2 billion/year on lobby-firms and not the private sector. Really. Enough of my words, what does Bishop of Oxford Lord Harries say of the bill? 


"profoundly undermining the very fabric of our democracy". 

Angela Eagle calls it 'sinister' and I agree.

The Conservative Government Manifesto said “Vote blue, go green” and this was their environmental mantra back in 2010. The manifesto said they had the


“responsibility to be the greenest government in our history”.

The Government has sought to reform the planning structures that have been developed through the wisdom of time, introduced the vile hypocrisy of biodiversity offsetting and now wants to gag the complainants - hectares upon hectares of greenbelt is threatened with infested rancid development, there are protest groups springing up like Japanese knotweed across the country, many lose the fight or will to fight through lack of legal and professional strength and the continuing name calling of opponents. They have no hope in the future.

All my years of environment enhancement is for nothing.


02 December 2013

Does the Environment have any meaning to Politicians - No! - Да ли има било какво значење животне средине политичарима - Не!

The Government and it's spineless co-voters of all parties are playing a game that is humiliating us all, they are laughing at us. one example. HS2 Environmental Statement 50,000 pages, 8 weeks to read, digest, understand and comment. Compared with the much needed in depth consultation for tractor speed limits at a weighty 24 pages in two documents which has 12 weeks consultation. I have tried to resist being course, but actually this Government and it;'s co-voters don't give a toss what you think and even less than that when it comes to the environment, landscape and society. So long as over-paid executives can have an extra 40 mins to finish Sudoku Extreme over a cafe and cinnamon swirl to hell with any other consideration. Enough for now, but there is more yet!

26 June 2013

Austerity - The Osbourne Way

George Osbourne today announcing £11.5 billion of cuts mainly focused on your local Government while also forcing through parliament
a Bill which authorises preparatory expenditure on a railway (HS2 - London's Train or the Private Sectors 1st Class Charter) without specifying further detail of the route and a limit on expenditure.

How austere is that?

Your local services are being cut to pay for a vanity project for London.


For the detail: http://www.dodsmonitoring.com/downloads/Bills2013/High_Speed_Rail_(Preparations)_Bill.pdf


STOP PRESS a day after writing this the predicted expenditure on HS2 jumped by £10 billion (again!). Good austerity measures! Strange that it is almost how much your local government are losing....


25 June 2013

Myth Busting on Housing Supply - Мит пући због стамбене понуде

Yet another bit of fun and games from the development sector, oh it's so difficult for them in the times of global recession.

The UK Government has been very keen to inform us how inefficient local authorities are and how their planning bureaucracy has made life oh so difficult for developers.

In the press this week we learnt that actually local authorities have been progressing planning applications for housing, but the developers have then not developed the land!!

Behind this is quite a naughty game developers are playing with our greenbelts.

We are constantly told by political parties who are lobbied by the developers that there is a shortage of housing supply so we MUST build more. Government have as a consequence of this mis-information deregulated the planning process to the point of a rubber stamp exercise as the presumption to develop now holds sway. Thus more applications are expected from the development sector and some are developed, the rest are 'land banked' as assets, because the local authority rubber stamp places a real financial premium on that land. While the land is banked it is locked from other (perhaps better uses) and becomes under-utilised, neglected and unmanaged. Nevertheless the development companies still have a piece of land to develop or sell on with inflated prices. Land becomes an over-inflated asset for the company shareholders to speculate on. This artificially high value is also viewed as an asset by accountants thereby enabling developers to look in better business shape than they are. Land values in the accounting systems should be valued on their present state (ie underused/derelict) rather than on the speculative value of land holding development hope-value.

The land remains locked, feeding the myth that land supply is too low for the alleged housing needs of the country, the more scarce land becomes the higher value it has and this in turn perpetuates the myth that there is not enough land to build on. This then leads developers to say land supply is short and it's all the local authorities fault while they sit on hectares of land creating a future enhanced value for their shareholders.

Ludicrous. All housing applications should be put on immediate hold while Government assesses the extent of land banking by development companies.

 
Highly technical MS Visio flow chart of what the rascals are up to.

How will you feel when the developer comes to a green belt like yours and says it is our moral duty (see previous blogs) to allow housing to ruin our green inheritance? How much will it annoy you that when they will rail road through their planning application with scant regard for local choice and democracy that they then sit on the land for 10 years as a grossly inflated asset, blighting the land but speculating on its falsified hope-value?

Not so good I suspect.

By the way, in my blog Localism and the Developer (below) the council voted through the proposals that were so vehemently opposed by local people. The local paper even held a vote and 82% voted against the proposals, yet the council approved the proposal, even having the impertinence and arrogance to say that they saw the papers poll as unrepresentative! They probably saw the march as unrepresentative too and all those objection letters. Councillors failed their duty to serve the people who voted them in to power. Developers continue to own local democracy, not you or I. It is most vexatious!