BASE HEADER
Do you agree with the approach laid out in Draft Policy Direction-38 - Biodiversity Net Gain?
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 90602
Derbyniwyd: 24/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Simon Pack
No. Warwickshire Wildlife Trust is not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain.
Local evidence through planning applications shows that more than 10% BNG is achievable in Warwickshire, and the Plan states that they are aiming to link with local priorities, so a greater target should be delivered. A number of other Councils such as Cornwall Council have already got plans through Examination with 20% net gain.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 90751
Derbyniwyd: 24/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Tim Goodwin
However, purchasing of ‘biodiversity units’ as a way of ‘off-setting’ will never improve biodiversity. Supporting the existing biodiversity, safeguarding and supporting areas of higher biodiversity already in existence is crucial. Research shows that developers aren’t implementing the ecological and biodiversity enhancements they originally claim to. This is a huge systemic issue and regulatory failure. In over 50% of cases the ‘net-gain’ exists only in on paper not in practice. Article reference: https://wildjustice.org.uk/general/lost-nature-report/
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 90885
Derbyniwyd: 24/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr James Morris
Purchasing ‘biodiversity units’ for off-setting does not enhance biodiversity; instead, supporting existing biodiversity and safeguarding high-biodiversity areas is vital. Research indicates that developers often fail to implement the ecological and biodiversity enhancements they initially promised, highlighting a significant systemic issue and regulatory failure. In more than 50% of cases, the ‘net-gain’ is merely a paper claim, not reflected in reality. This situation underscores the need for stronger regulations and oversight to ensure that biodiversity commitments are genuinely fulfilled.
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 90907
Derbyniwyd: 24/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Emma Barber
Purchasing ‘biodiversity units’ for offsetting doesn’t enhance biodiversity; instead, supporting existing biodiversity and safeguarding high-biodiversity areas is crucial. Research reveals that developers often fail to implement the ecological and biodiversity enhancements they initially promised, highlighting a significant systemic issue and regulatory failure. In over 50% of cases, the ‘net-gain’ is merely a paper claim, not reflected in reality. This situation emphasises the need for stricter regulations and oversight to ensure that biodiversity commitments are genuinely fulfilled.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 90940
Derbyniwyd: 24/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Jason Lupton
The council should be targeting more then 10% net gain for each development. Some of the larger house builders target 25% and their developments have environmental policies at the core.
Purchasing off-site units should remain a last resort and design proposals should provide net gains within site boundaries.
Design teams should be led by ecologists and landscape architects not engineers and typical architects.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91211
Derbyniwyd: 25/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Radford Semele Parish Council
‘Radford Semele Parish Council would urge that any offsite biodiversity net gains should be
as local as possible. Consequently, it would suggest deletion of the option to locate gains
anywhere in England and the option to purchase credits.’
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91360
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Giles Dugmore
Site 492 Land at The Greens, South of Alcester Road, SuA, and site 827 South of Alcester Road, SuA: Any development of this site will lead to an immediate and permanent biodiversity loss. The field, surrounding hedgerow and tress are home to a diverse range of wildlife. Developing the field will eradicate habitat and disturb wildlife in the hedgerow and trees and it will leave. Development will also break a green corridor from Shottery Field, the school playing fields, the site through to the allotments and beyond.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91401
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Lucia Restall Orr
Planning applications evidence clearly demonstrates that Warwickshire is easily capable of more than 10% BNG, with other councils across the country already committed to 20%. More ambitious targets are needed.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91452
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Bev Atkinson
Site 492 Land at The Greens, South of Alcester Road, Stratford-upon-Avon, and site 827 South of Alcester Road, Stratford-upon-Avon
Any development of this site will have an enormous and irreversible impact on the environment and its biodiversity. This includes the health and longevity of the trees and hedgerows, the destruction of habitats and disruption of wildlife.
The field, surrounding hedgerow and tress are home to a diverse range of wildlife. Development will also break a green corridor from Shottery Field, the school playing fields, the site through to the allotments and beyond.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91515
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mary Adams
I'm not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain.
Local evidence through planning applications shows that more than 10% BNG is achievable in Warwickshire, and the Plan states that they are aiming to link with local priorities, so a greater target should be delivered. A number of other Councils such as Cornwall Council have already got plans through Examination with 20% net gain.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91551
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Sidney Syson
Yes but how will this be monitored and enforced?
My concern is also the loss of biodiversity in the towns as morre extensions are built and front gardens covered in gravel or paving and used as hardstanding for vehicles.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91712
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Geoff Norman
Sensible
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91788
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Joanne Taylor
N/A
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91819
Derbyniwyd: 26/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Tim Burridge
No. Warwickshire Wildlife Trust is not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain.
Local evidence through planning applications shows that more than 10% BNG is achievable in Warwickshire, and the Plan states that they are aiming to link with local priorities, so a greater target should be delivered. A number of other Councils such as Cornwall Council have already got plans through Examination with 20% net gain.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 91909
Derbyniwyd: 27/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Donna Goodwin
Purchasing of ‘biodiversity units’ as a way of ‘off-setting’ will never improve biodiversity. Supporting the existing biodiversity, safeguarding and supporting areas of higher biodiversity already in existence is crucial. Research shows that developers aren’t implementing the ecological and biodiversity enhancements they originally claim to. This is a huge systemic issue and regulatory failure. In over 50% of cases the ‘net-gain’ exists only in on paper not in practice. Article reference: https://wildjustice.org.uk/general/lost-nature-report/
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92152
Derbyniwyd: 27/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Patricia Scott
I am not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain. Developers are allowed to get away with trashing our environment and underdelivering on mitigation so the council needs to set higher standards and aim for at least 20% net gain - something which which other councils seem to have done.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92230
Derbyniwyd: 27/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Isobel McLauchlin
This won't work - only by supporting existing biodiversity and safeguarding our green spaces where wildlife and nature can thrive, will work. Developers promise alot on paper - in practice it doesn't happen. 'Net-Gain' exists on paper - not in reality.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92313
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr G Wyatt
Again, my concern is that existing habitat may be lost to development and that mitigation may be in name only, so losing some species/numbers in population.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92433
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Christine Slaughter
Buying biodiversity units to "offset" "net gain" is a paper response and doesn't happen in practice.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92499
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Julian Brown
Agree
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92607
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: The Planning Bureau Ltd
Although we recognise that the 10% is a minimum it should be for the developer to decide whether to go beyond this figure not the Council. It is important to remember that that it is impossible to know what the cost of delivering net gain is until the base level of biodiversity on a site is known and consequently what is required to achieve a 10% net gain. The council should therefore not require a BNG of greater than the 10%.
Yes
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92651
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Richard Yates
Planting of significant trees etc should start before spades in the ground and completed within the development when works have finished. Running out of money should not be the excuse used by shoddy developers for not enhancing the environment they are helping to destroy
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92652
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Bex Thomson
No comment
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92701
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Heidi Ambrose-Brown
If large chunks of green belt are taken for housing and commercial development - how long does it take for this biodiversity net gain to kick in? It will take decades for the damage to the eco system to repair. We have seen from the HS2 development that protected trees were indiscriminately destroyed and saplings that were supposed to be planted were scattered .
We would need much more detail and hard evidence of how the proposed Biodiversity Net Gain will be achieved.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92724
Derbyniwyd: 28/02/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Luke Kempton
No. I am not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain.
Local evidence through planning applications shows that more than 10% BNG is achievable in Warwickshire, and the Plan states that they are aiming to link with local priorities, so a greater target should be delivered. A number of other Councils such as Cornwall Council have already got plans through Examination with 20% net gain
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92828
Derbyniwyd: 01/03/2025
Ymatebydd: Mrs Carolyn Stacey
Evidence from previous developments is that biodiversity mitigation promises are not kept, not challenged when broken. The monitoring and regulation of this is severely lacking. It takes time to establish truly biodiverse areas, at all scales. we should maintain those already established such as hedgerows and woodland, even at a micro-scale. Tree planting is positive but no substitute for existing wild areas and hedgerows (see summary of research in Fred Pearce's book "A Trillion Trees" -an excellent read on this issue).
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 92917
Derbyniwyd: 01/03/2025
Ymatebydd: Meon Vale Residents Association
It is recognised that new development can result in the loss of habitat, trees and hedges. The policy should seek more than the minimum 10% BNG to redress the loss caused by development.
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 93007
Derbyniwyd: 01/03/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Dominic Momcilovic
Support the existing biodiversity, safeguarding and supporting areas of high biodiversity already in existence is crucial. Developers do not have a good reputation of implementing enhancements re: biodiversity & ecological promises.
Other
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 93202
Derbyniwyd: 01/03/2025
Ymatebydd: Ms Martina Hunt
Purchasing of biodiversity units as a way of offsetting will not improve biodiversity, indeed it is a minimum cop-out. Supporting the existing biodiversity, safeguarding and supporting areas of higher biodiversity already in existence is crucial. Research shows that developers are not implementing the ecological and biodiversity enhancements they claim to do and was a core part of their planning application submissions. This is a massive systemic issue that is being ignored and is a failure in planning. In over 50% of cases the 'net gain' only ever exists on paper.
No
Preferred Options 2025
ID sylw: 93224
Derbyniwyd: 01/03/2025
Ymatebydd: Mr Kim Salmon
Warwickshire Wildlife Trust is not satisfied with the councils’ intention to ‘explore opportunities’ for higher than the bare minimum of 10% Biodiversity Net Gain.
Local evidence through planning applications shows that more than 10% BNG is achievable in Warwickshire, and the Plan states that they are aiming to link with local priorities, so a greater target should be delivered. A number of other Councils such as Cornwall Council have already got plans through Examination with 20% net gain.