Published: 18 August 2025. The English Chronicle Desk
Chancellor Rachel Reeves is reportedly preparing to overhaul environmental safeguards in the UK in an effort to speed up infrastructure projects and stimulate economic growth. According to reports, Treasury officials are drafting new planning reforms aimed at reducing the influence of wildlife protections on development timelines.
The proposed reforms would amend elements of European environmental regulations, which developers argue have delayed key projects. While Labour ministers have previously emphasised that their planning overhaul seeks to balance economic growth with environmental conservation, Reeves is said to believe that stronger measures are required to remove barriers more efficiently.
The Planning and Infrastructure Bill, currently progressing through Parliament, already allows developers to make general environmental improvements and contribute to a “nature restoration fund” that enhances habitats elsewhere. However, the chancellor is exploring additional, more controversial changes.
Among the proposals under discussion is the creation of a streamlined, UK-only list of protected species, reducing the focus on wildlife considered rare in Europe but relatively common in Britain. Reeves is also reportedly considering removing the EU “precautionary principle,” which obliges developers to prove that their projects will not harm protected sites, replacing it with a cost-benefit style risk assessment for building projects.
Legal challenges from environmental campaigners may also face stricter limits under the proposed reforms. Reeves has previously criticised the protection of bats and newts as obstacles to economic development, emphasising the need to prioritise housing, commuter times, and energy costs over wildlife concerns. Speaking to the House of Lords economic affairs committee last month, she highlighted HS2 delays in Leeds as a prime example of nature protections hindering infrastructure progress.
High-profile instances of costly environmental safeguards include the £100m “bat tunnel” in Buckinghamshire built for HS2 and the “fish disco” at the Hinkley Point C nuclear plant, which uses sound to keep fish away from cooling systems.
The government maintains that the existing Planning and Infrastructure Bill’s nature restoration fund would allow developers to offset environmental damage by investing in conservation projects elsewhere, but Reeves’ proposed reforms signal a potential shift toward a more permissive approach to development at the expense of certain wildlife protections.
























































































