No time to waste, back reforms and get Britain building warns Deputy PM
Contents |
[edit] Push for a pro-growth agenda
The Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has warned there is ‘no time to waste’ as she urged Parliament to back key legislation needed to speed up the delivery of the Plan for Change milestone of 1.5 million homes and deliver the vital infrastructure this country needs as the Planning and Infrastructure Bill has its Second Reading in Parliament on 24 March 2025.
The government has already announced a commitment to deliver a new 10-year Infrastructure Strategy, which will help unlock private investment over the next decade for new housing, schools, hospitals, and public transport to be set out in due course. As part of its pro-growth agenda, 12 decisions on Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects, including the Immingham Green Energy Terminal have already been made. This alongside wider planning reforms, including the updated National Planning Policy Framework and review on statutory consultees, the government aims to back builders and councils to deliver more homes and infrastructure in the areas where it is most needed.
For further detail see the Planning and Infrastructure bill and reactions to it.
[edit] Key measures of the Bill
Key measures of the Bill include:
- Overhauling planning decisions through the introduction of a national scheme of delegation to set out which applications should be determined by officers and which should go to committee, speeding up the approval process for new development.
- Establishing a Nature Restoration Fund to deliver a win-win for both the economy and nature ensuring builders can meet their environmental obligations faster.
- Strengthening the compulsory purchase process to acquire land for projects that are in the public interest and ensure compensation paid to landowners is not excessive.
- Giving additional powers to development corporations to make it easier when delivering large-scale developments, including the next generation of new towns.
- Reducing the burdensome consultation process when seeking approval for major infrastructure projects, including reservoirs, windfarms, roads and railway lines.
- Prioritising approved clean energy projects, such as wind and solar, for grid connections with a new ‘first ready, first connected’ system.
- Limiting the number of times that government decisions on major infrastructure projects can be legally challenged, with only one attempt for meritless cases.
- People living near new electricity transmission infrastructure will also receive up to £2,500 over 10 years off their energy bills, ensuring those hosting vital infrastructure can benefit from supporting this nationally critical mission.
In its announcement to back reforms to get Britain building the government explains that the landmark Bill is at the heart of its mission to secure Britain’s future through the Plan for Change, by supporting the push to deliver the 1.5 million homes and the target of making at least 150 decisions on major infrastructure projects in this Parliament – tripling the 57 decisions made in the previous Parliament and more than the 130 made since 2011. The government say that getting critical infrastructure built is essential to making Britain a clean energy superpower – bringing people’s bills down for good and giving Britain energy security – delivering the higher living standards working people deserve. It will also bring a range of skilled jobs to areas across the country.
[edit] Ministerial comments
Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, Angela Rayner said:
“We have no time to waste in bringing the housing crisis we’ve inherited to an end, not only for those struggling to get onto the housing ladder but for the families and young children who are stuck in temporary accommodation. That’s why it is so crucial that we get Britain building and the return of the landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill to Parliament today represents another step forward in achieving this goal.
“But to ensure we can prove the naysayers wrong, and deliver on our Plan for Change target to build the 1.5 million homes and crucial infrastructure this country needs, we need to make our planning reforms law as quickly as possible. This is why today I am urging Parliament to back this Bill and ensure we can deliver the change so many people want to see.”
Housing and Planning Minister, Matthew Pennycook said:
“Our landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill will fundamentally change how we build things in this country. By streamlining the delivery of new homes and critical infrastructure, it will help tackle the housing crisis and raise living standards in every part of the country."
“The Bill marks another decisive step toward a planning system that is pro-growth and pro-infrastructure and will deliver on our Plan for Change commitments to build 1.5 million homes and fast-track planning decisions on at least 150 major economic infrastructure projects in this Parliament.”
This article is based on the government press release "Deputy PM tells Parliament: Back reforms to get Britain building" dated 24 March 2025.
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