Environmental Delivery Plans EDP
In March 2025 the government introduced the Planning and Infrastructure Bill to Parliament as part of a wider programme of reform. Key elements of this legislation are the Nature Restoration Fund (NRF), and the the creation and delivery of rhe related Environmental Delivery Plans (EDPs). Seen by the Government and Natural England as an opportunity to both accelerate sustainable development and enhance the environment. The Natural England blog piece "Accelerating Development and Nature Recovery: A Natural England Perspective on the Nature Restoration Fund" describes in some detail the idea and methodology behind EDPs.
"The NRF will provide a flexible, scalable approach to delivering environmental improvements where developments have impacts on internationally important protected sites or on protected species. This will be achieved through the creation and delivery of Environmental Delivery Plans (EDPs), which will identify strategic interventions at a landscape scale, known as conservation measures, to ensure better outcomes for nature. EDPs will:
- be prepared by Natural England, based on the best available scientific evidence, previous experience and with consideration to Environmental Strategies and Local Plans such as LNRS
- focus on specific environmental impacts from development and designed to materially outweigh the negative effects of the specific developments
- be subjected to public consultation and consultation with key public authorities
- signed off by the Secretary of State who can only approve an EDP if it passes the Overall Improvement Test, as defined by law
- have robust monitoring and reporting arrangements and the means to take remedial action
"The EDP will be the means to establish a NRF and allow Natural England to set the levy a developer must pay to make use of the Fund. Developers can choose to contribute to the fund rather than follow the current arrangements, which can be uncertain and complex, and require the developer to identify impact and secure traditional, site-specific mitigation themselves. The funding will be used to implement the EDP that Natural England delivers in partnership with a range of local organisations and bodies, including Local Record Centres, Local Planning Authorities, environmental organisations, farmers and land managers. "
The Environmental Audit Committee. Environmental sustainability and housing growth: Sixth Report of Session 2024–26 HC 439 published 25 November, 2025 describes Environmental Delivery Plan (EDP) (section 3.1) thus: "In creating an Environmental Delivery Plan (EDP), either on its own initiative or at the request of the Secretary of State, Natural England will set out a package of conservation measures sufficient to address one or more environmental impacts of development and secure an environmental uplift. Rather than being limited to addressing the impact of a single development, an EDP will be able to pool resources and deliver conservation measures at scale to maximise the outcome for the environment whilst securing secondary benefits like public access to green spaces. At the same time, developers will benefit from a streamlined process and simple user experience."
The report praised the creation of these for their potential efficiency gains, but also highlighted fear in some stakeholders that they dilute local ecological requirements and allow developers to buy out on nature obligations. It also rased some concerns about the resourcing of Natural England in the regulatory and delivery ecosystem, and the indicative dual roles under the new policy as regulator and implementer, and whether it has the capacity and independence to support the twin goals of growth and nature protection.
A related term Environmental Development Plans (EDP) are also referred to in Part Three of the Government’s Planning and Infrastructure Bill, and the Glossary of the EAC report being considered by Parliament as of November 2025. "They consist of a package of conservation measures that aim to offset and address the environmental impacts of development. Unlike current approaches, that assess impacts on a site-by-site basis, EDPs apply to broader geographical areas, aiming to enable more strategic environmental planning."
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Areas of outstanding natural beauty.
- Biodiversity mitigation hierarchy.
- Biodiversity Net Gain BNG
- Biodiversity net gain (BNG) regulations and implementation; Government response.
- Biodiversity Net Gain: statutory must-haves, plus the delivery model that de-risks planning.
- Biodiversity net gain, tools, tips and terms for small sites.
- Biodiversity net gain and terminology explained.
- Built environment.
- Carbon.
- Competence.
- Conservation area.
- Designated sites.
- Ecological impact assessment.
- Ecological survey.
- Environment.
- Environmental engineering.
- Environmental Development Plans EDP.
- Environmental impact.
- Environmental impact assessment EIA.
- Environmental Improvement Plan.
- Environmental Land Management Schemes ELMS.
- Environmental management procedures manual.
- Environmental modelling.
- Environmental net gain.
- Environmental Outcomes Report EOR.
- Environmental permit.
- Environmental plan.
- Environmental policy.
- Environmental Principles Policy Statement EPPS.
- Environmental statement.
- Ecological impact assessment.
- Forests.
- Green belt.
- Guidance on tree specification, BNG and more.
- How nature can be used to improve wellbeing.
- Local Nature Reserve.
- Local Nature Recovery Strategy LNRS.
- Mitigation hierarchy.
- National nature reserve.
- National Parks.
- National Planning Practice Guidance.
- Natural England.
- Nature Restoration Fund NRF.
- Nature Recovery Network NRN.
- NPPF consultation briefing notes on terms.
- NPPF inquiry.
- NPPF.
- Nutrient Neutrality NN.
- NPPF.
- Outline planning permission.
- Planning and Infrastructure Bill PIB
- Planning legislation.
- Planning permission.
- Protected species.
- Resilience.
- Sustainability.
- Site of Nature Conservation Interest (SNCI).
- Sites of special scientific interest.
- What is the biodiversity metric?
- Wildlife corridor.
- Wildlife Trusts.
Featured articles and news
Recognising culture as key to sustainable economic growth
Creative UK Provocation paper: Culture as Growth Infrastructure.
Futurebuild and UK Construction Week London Unite
Creating the UK’s Built Environment Super Event and over 25 other key partnerships.
Welsh and Scottish 2026 elections
Manifestos for the built environment for upcoming same May day elections.
Advancing BIM education with a competency framework
“We don’t need people who can just draw in 3D. We need people who can think in data.”
Guidance notes to prepare for April ERA changes
From the Electrical Contractors' Association Employee Relations team.
Significant changes to be seen from the new ERA in 2026 and 2027, starting on 6 April 2026.
First aid in the modern workplace with St John Ambulance.
Ireland's National Residential Retrofit Plan
Staged initiatives introduced step by step.
Solar panels, pitched roofs and risk of fire spread
60% increase in solar panel fires prompts tests and installation warnings.
Modernising heat networks with Heat interface unit
Why HIUs hold the key to efficiency upgrades.
Reflecting on the work of the CIOB Academy
Looking back on 2025 and where it's going next.
Procurement in construction: Knowledge hub
Brief, overview, key articles and over 1000 more covering procurement.
Sir John Betjeman’s love of Victorian church architecture.
Exchange for Change for UK deposit return scheme
The UK Deposit Management Organisation established to deliver Deposit Return Scheme unveils trading name.
A guide to integrating heat pumps
As the Future Homes Standard approaches Future Homes Hub publishes hints and tips for Architects and Architectural Technologists.




















