Planning and Infrastructure Bill
“My Ministers will get Britain building, including through
planning reform, as they seek to accelerate the delivery of high
quality infrastructure and housing”
- The current planning regime acts as a major brake on economic
growth. The Planning and Infrastructure Bill will play a key role
in addressing this constraint, unlocking more housing and
infrastructure across the country and supporting sustained
economic growth. The planning system must be an enabler of growth
– enabling democratic engagement with how, not if, homes and
infrastructure are built.
- Reforming the planning system is key to unlocking our
country's economic growth – enabling us to deliver both the
housing and critical infrastructure that communities need. The
Bill will speed up and streamline the planning process to build
more homes of all tenures and accelerate the delivery of major
infrastructure projects in alignment with our industrial, energy,
and transport strategies.
What does the Bill do?
- The Bill will make improvements to the planning system at a
local level, modernising planning committees and increasing
local planning authorities' capacity to deliver an improved
service.
- The Planning and Infrastructure Bill will accelerate
housebuilding and infrastructure delivery by:
-
streamlining the delivery process for critical
infrastructure including accelerating upgrades to
the national grid and boosting renewable energy, which will
benefit local communities, unlock delivery of our 2030 clean
power mission and net zero obligations, and secure domestic
energy security. We will simplify the consenting process for
major infrastructure projects and enable relevant, new and
improved National Policy Statements to come forward,
establishing a review process that provides the opportunity
for them to be updated every five years, giving increased
certainty to developers and communities.
-
further reforming compulsory purchase compensation
rules to ensure that compensation paid to landowners
is fair but not excessive where important social and physical
infrastructure and affordable housing are being delivered.
The reforms will help unlock more sites for development,
enabling more effective land assembly, and in doing so
speeding up housebuilding and delivering more affordable
housing, supporting the public interest.
-
improving local planning decision making by
modernising planning committees.
-
increasing local planning authorities'
capacity, to improve performance and decision
making, providing a more predictable service to developers
and investors.
-
using development to fund nature recovery where
currently both are stalled, unlocking a win-win
outcome for the economy and for nature, because we know we
can do better than the status quo. Our commitment to the
environment is unwavering, which is why the Government will
work with nature delivery organisations, stakeholders and the
sector over the summer to determine the best way forward. We
will only act in legislation where we can confirm to
Parliament that the steps we are taking will deliver positive
environmental outcomes. Where we can demonstrate this, the
Bill will deliver any necessary changes.
Territorial extent and application
- The majority of the Bill is expected to extend and apply to
England and Wales. Some measures may also extend and apply to
Scotland.
Key facts
- Timescales for planning decision-making are growing: only 9
per cent of Local Planning Authorities (LPAs) are determining
more than 70 per cent of non-major applications within 8 weeks.
Only 1 per cent of LPAs determine more than 60 per cent of major
applications within the statutory 13-week period. This Bill will
look to help reverse this trend, boosting capacity at a local
level and speeding up decision-making, which will in turn help to
accelerate a future pipeline of housing delivery.
- In 2022/23, the national development management service
(local planning services) cost £794 million to operate with an
estimated funding shortfall of £262 million per annum. This
legislation will increase local planning authorities' capacity to
deliver an improved service.
- The Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project regime
established an early reputation for delivering fair and timely
consents – providing a one stop shop for planning consent on
major infrastructure projects. Decision making timelines have
slowed in recent years however, with the average Development
Consent Order taking 4.2 years, up from 2.6 across 2012/2021.
Legal challenges have also increased since 2021 (4 successful out
of 15 legal challenges), prompting actors to increase the scope
and volume of their environmental impact assessments to tens of
thousands of pages.
- The demand for major infrastructure is high, the National
Infrastructure Commission state that failure to accelerate
infrastructure delivery plans in the next 5 years, could
constrain economic growth and threaten climate targets. Meeting
the UK's infrastructure needs will require a change in Government
decisions over the next 10-15 years, alongside considerations on
the environment and community impacts.
- There has been an unprecedented increase in developers
withholding agreements to connect to the grid, with far more
generation in the queue than we will need to power the country by
2050. 85 per cent of projects have later connection dates than
requested, often into the late-2030s.
- Energy UK say that: “It's excellent to see the new
Government prioritise planning reforms as a key enabler for
economic growth and enhancing our energy security.”