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Reeves Considers Scaling Back Wildlife Rules as Government Moves to Unblock Big Projects

The push reflects Labour’s bet that loosening safeguards will speed housing and infrastructure.

Overview

  • Reports say the Treasury is preparing a further planning bill that could replace the EU-style precautionary principle with a risk–benefit test and shift to a UK-only list of protected species.
  • Chancellor Rachel Reeves is also weighing tighter limits on legal challenges, with options including allowing only a single opportunity for judicial review on major schemes.
  • The existing Planning and Infrastructure Bill would let developers offset damage through a nature restoration fund, an approach questioned by conservation groups and some developers for its effectiveness.
  • Environment secretary Steve Reed will create a ministerial board to track more than 50 critical projects, backed by £500 million for planning capacity and a single lead contact at Natural England for complex cases.
  • Reeves has signaled priority for housing and infrastructure in recent remarks, while wildlife charities warn of legal challenges and accuse ministers of scapegoating species, with no final decisions announced.