Developers must now offset damage to nature by achieving a 10% biodiversity net gain - but is buying up pockets of land and rewilding them the answer?To most people driving through the waterlogged fields of West Sussex, a patch of muddy land dotted with scrubby trees would not warrant a second glance. But this former farmland is being given a new lease of life as part of a government scheme to boost wildlife.Ardingly habitat bank is one of the pilot sites for the biodiversity net gain (BNG) scheme. Under legislation that came into force in February 2024, new roads, houses and other building projects must achieve a 10% net gain in biodiversity if nature is damaged on a site. So if a forest is bulldozed to make way for a block of flats, the developer must recreate a similar habitat, plus 10%. Continue reading...
Habitat banks: how law to boost wildlife in England is faring one year in
14. února 2025 16:16
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Zdroj: The Guardian