Nuclear Regulatory Review: don’t turn nature crisis into catastrophe

A view at the top of Dartmoor National Park in Devon on an early morning

© Ross Hoddinott/2020VISION

Nuclear Regulatory Review: don’t turn nature crisis into catastrophe

Breaking news: next steps announced on the Review by UK Government

On 13th March UK Government published its response to the Nuclear Regulatory Review 2025

The response demonstrates that the Government has seen sense and stepped away, for now, from a wholesale legal weakening of the Habitats Regulations. Ministers have understood that ripping up the laws which protect the wild places people love is a short-cut to environmental, economic and political disaster. 

However, deep concerns remain around the implementation of new guidance and the risks to nature that could follow. 

Read The Wildlife Trust full response
 

Recommendations in the Nuclear Regulatory Review put nature at risk

Wildlife and natural places need more protection, not less. But the UK Government is thinking about making it even easier and cheaper for developers to destroy our last few natural spaces.

A report called the Nuclear Regulatory Review is suggesting that protections for nature should be weakened. It says these protections result in unnecessary costs for developers. This is not true. We can't afford to destroy the few havens we have for wildlife. 

This isn't policy yet - there's still time to stop this from happening. That's why we encouraged our supporters to take our simple action to send an email to Ed Miliband, the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, and help us to stop this in its tracks. Thank you to everyone who took action to protect our wildlife!

Thank you to everyone who took our simple action and sent an email to Ed Miliband, the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, and helped us to stop this in its tracks. 

The Nuclear Regulatory Review proposes weakening the Habitat Regulations

The Review proposes amending the Habitats Regulations so that developers don’t have to worry about avoiding harm to nature sites when they build nuclear plants. It also proposes removing a duty on public bodies to further the conservation and public access purpose of National Parks and National Landscapes.  

Nature cannot afford this. Evidence continues to show that nature is in decline, and damage to nature is also damage to climate.  


The Prime Minister previously suggested he wants the proposals to apply beyond the nuclear sector

In a speech on 1st December, the Prime Minister said he agreed with all recommendations in the Nuclear Regulatory Review and also asked the Business Secretary to apply them to sectors beyond nuclear in the upcoming Industrial Strategy. This means the harmful recommendations could be extended beyond potential new nuclear energy sites. 

If Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) gives the green light for the harmful Nuclear Regulatory Review recommendations, it makes a second damaging Planning Bill inevitable. This will slam the door on nature's recovery and make net zero even harder to achieve. 


If those proposals go ahead, people will suffer as well as wildlife 

The recommendations in the Review will make natural spaces less safe from development and more vulnerable to damage and loss. These spaces might be close to where you live, or special landscapes that you visit and care about. The UK has already lost more biodiversity than any other country over the last few decades.  

Couple walking down path through woodland

Ben Hall/2020VISION

The risks of environmental damage through these recommendations will also have knock-on impacts for economic stability, which affects everyone through the cost of living. 

Allowing the natural world to be neglected in this way will only benefit a handful of developers who can cut costs by bending the rules in future.  

In the last year, the UK Government has targeted nature and wildlife, calling spiders and bats and newts 'blockers' and deliberately getting rid of legal safeguards and policies that are supposed to help nature recover.  This goes against all evidence, and the public's views that nature is necessary to everyone. Evidence shows a healthy environment underpins our economy and our wellbeing, and that building with nature in mind helps to ensure development is high quality and sustainable.   

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