'Sustained pattern of retreat': Michael Gove slams proposals to water down Biodiversity Net Gain scheme

Business Green 8 hours ago

Former Environment Secretary accuses government of undermining flagship nature scheme through proposals to exempt developments from new biodiversity market
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 1 hour ago



The UK government’s Critical Minerals Strategy underlines the urgency of decarbonising the built environment through secure and low-carbon supply chains. By targeting increased domestic sourcing and recycling of vital materials such as lithium and rare earth elements, the plan acknowledges the dependence of sustainable construction on resilient resource streams. This shift is central to reducing the embodied carbon in materials such as concrete and steel and aligns with emerging frameworks for whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment that quantify environmental impact throughout a building’s lifespan. The strategy reinforces the role of circular economy principles and life cycle thinking in construction as industry standards push towards net zero whole life carbon goals.

Policy uncertainty following the stalled COP30 negotiations has intensified pressures across sustainable building design and infrastructure development. The absence of defined pathways for implementing low carbon construction materials and resource efficiency in construction limits progress on carbon footprint reduction and environmental sustainability in construction. Developers and investors are demanding consistent regulation that embeds sustainable building practices, whole life carbon targets, and life cycle cost assessment into procurement and planning processes. Leading certification frameworks such as BREEAM and the upcoming BREEAM v7 are becoming key instruments in verifying sustainable design, building lifecycle performance, and energy-efficient buildings.

Technological innovation offers partial solutions. Research into hydrogen plasma for metal extraction could lower the carbon footprint of construction by cutting emissions in metallurgical processes. If proven viable, it would enhance sustainable material specification and carbon neutral construction capabilities, although environmental product declarations (EPDs) and ecological risk assessments will need to confirm true benefits. The trend underscores the need for circular construction strategies that integrate eco-friendly construction practices from material sourcing to end-of-life reuse in construction.

The political resistance to weakening the UK’s Biodiversity Net Gain commitments reflects a growing acceptance that green infrastructure and eco-design for buildings are essential to sustainable urban development. Developers face rising expectations to demonstrate green construction methodologies, renewable building materials selection, and low-impact construction techniques that protect biodiversity. The construction sector’s contribution to decarbonising the built environment will depend on consistent adoption of sustainable architecture, low embodied carbon materials, and life cycle cost transparency. The transition to net zero carbon buildings requires collaboration across the supply chain, a commitment to sustainability metrics, and transformation of every stage of the construction lifecycle.

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