Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

UK to ease EU era water pollution restrictions for new homes

The so-called “nutrient neutrality� rules in place were designed to ensure a new development does not add harmful nutrients to nearby waterways

UK to ease EU era water pollution restrictions for new homes

THE government on Tuesday (29) said that it would ease EU era water pollution restrictions to boost housebuilding.

The so-called “nutrient neutrality” rules in place were designed to ensure a new development does not add harmful nutrients to nearby waterways.


“Over 100,000 homes held up due to defective EU laws will be unblocked between now and 2030, delivering an estimated £18 billion boost to the economy,” ministers said.

Britain, which withdrew from the EU at the end of January in 2020, also said it would double investment in its nutrient mitigation scheme to £280 million “to offset the very small amount of additional nutrient discharge” from the construction of the new homes.

“I want to see more homes built,” the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, said on X, formerly Twitter. “But sometimes hangover EU laws get in the way. It’s not right.”

The changes are proposed in an amendment to a bill currently going through parliament.

The government’s move angered green campaigners.

“Who would look at our sewage-infested rivers and conclude what they need is weaker pollution rules? No one, and that should include our government,” said Doug Parr, policy director at Greenpeace UK.

Craig Bennett, chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, said it was a “disgraceful move which undermines public trust in the government”.

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

NHS

The move follows a trial involving more than 30,000 NHS workers across 90 NHS organisations using Microsoft 365 Copilot.

Getty Images

NHS to roll out AI tools to 500,000 staff by 2026

MORE than 500,000 NHS staff will be given access to new artificial intelligence tools aimed at reducing time spent on administrative work, NHS England said on Monday.

NHS England said 505,000 clinicians and support staff would receive access to Microsoft 365 Copilot as part of plans to expand AI use across healthcare services.

Keep ReadingShow less