The Planning and Infrastructure Bill is back in the spotlight this month as it reaches the Report Stage in the House of Lords. At the heart of the debate is Part 3, which introduces Environmental Delivery Plans (EDPs) – a new, untested system that would replace many site-by-site nature protections with strategic, landscape-scale planning.
The Bill’s Report Stage in the House of Lords begins on Monday 20 October 2025. After the Report Stage, it will proceed to Third Reading in the House of Lords (date to be confirmed). Once the Lords have completed their amendments, the Bill will be returned to the House of Commons for Consideration of Amendments. The Government aims for the Bill to receive Royal Assent by early November 2025.
Current State of Play
Peers debated the Bill exhaustively at Committee Stage and some progress has been made. After months of pressure from civil society and from the Lords, the Government added stronger ecological evidence requirements, clearer tests, and better reporting to Part 3.
These are baby steps forward. But fundamental flaws remain. The Bill still weakens legal environmental protection, and many of the key problems with the Bill have not been dealt with.
The mitigation hierarchy is still missing and the EDP model remains unproven and highly risky. With the UK already one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth, we can’t afford to gamble on untested ideas.
The Government claims EDPs will allow developers to compensate for local ecological harm by investing in wider landscape recovery. But there’s a problem: it doesn’t work for most species.
For rare and protected species like bats, dormice, otters, barn owls, fungi, and invertebrates, there’s no convincing scientific evidence that this kind of offsetting can deliver real conservation outcomes.