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jackthehat | 15:45 Tue 29th Oct 2024 | Property
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Good afternoon😁

I have got 2 large projects underway which have just gone to the Planners. The bean-counters have deployed their abacuses (abaci?) and calculated that under the new Biodiversity Net Gain legislation they attract a need for 9 and 12 trees respectively.......at £1000 per tree!!! Due to the nature of the schemes, we can't do any 'off-setting', either.

I can't get any joy in finding out where this ££ figure comes from. The Planners keep emailing the SPD to me in response to my queries - it just says £1000 with no explanation of how this figure has been arrived at.

Do you have any idea how much a BNG tree costs in your neck of the woods?

Thank you kindly.

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bng trees cost

 

What is a BNG tree, exactly?  All trees are valuable for the environment.  Trees keep rooting themselves in my garden - there's an aspiring sycamore and a rowan which I'd happily find a home for.  Friends have planted acorns.

Probably me being simplistic, but it does puzzle me.

Why do they have to be big anyway? They'll grow.

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I am not disagreeing with the need for Biodiversity Net Gains.....I would like to know why the Planners think that a tree costs £1000 to buy and plant and how they arrived at that figure?

From what I gather the BNG is monitored over a thirty-year period and each tree needs to be monitored.

If they are asking for £1,000 per tree, that works out at roughly £33 per tree per year.

I don't know how often the trees are monitored or what all is undertaken during it but it appears not to be as simple as digging holes, planting saplings, forgetting about them and charging you £21,000 for the privilege.

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TCL - If you have gleaned that information from somewhere, I would be grateful for the source.

I need to be able to explain it to my clients and it is always less painful for me if I can point them elsewhere. 😃

£100 for the sapling. £50 for the planting. God knows what for the annual maintenance costs. God knows what for the legal fees to ensure that the trees are looked after rather than left to die.

 

I was all over the place looking but I'll go through my history to find it again.

Luckily, I've haven't had to be involved in these so far. It's just yet another level of compliance. Rather like having to engage 'consultants' for SAP ratings/ environmental surveys /archeological surveys/ bat surveys  etc ....  ad nauseam.

For these, they like you to engage a 'competent person'. The usual get-out  phrase. Generally, an ecologist. I can't seem to get any sensible idea of cost since they are reluctant to generalise.  The various specialists who've inevitably sprung up, insist it depends on the size of the development; location; other environmental considerations   blah... blah.

From what I can see, Corby ^^  has it. There seems to be some kind of ongoing maintenance commitment  for 30 years. That, I guess, is where the reluctance to generalise comes from.

I'm so sorry to be of absolutely no use to you here Jack. I've done a little Googling (BNG ecologists), and, as expected, there are any number of people offering to do all this for you.

At least you would likely get more sense out of them than the Planning Dept.

My apologies.

"You will need to sign a legal agreement with a responsible body or local authority. The legal agreement will set out how you will create, enhance, maintain and monitor the biodiversity of your registered units to deliver off-site biodiversity net gain. It must last for a minimum of 30 years."

https://shorturl.at/0RTAu

"Monitoring delivery of BNG sits with whoever has made the legal agreement with the landowner/manager to secure delivery of the habitat, i.e. a LPA for planning obligations and conditions or the responsible body for conservation covenants. Advice on monitoring BNG through the planning process is provided in Paragraph: 006 Reference ID: 74-006-2023 of the BNG PPG and there is a section on BNG monitoring in Defra’s guidance for LPAs. Our BNG in Development Management Toolkit provides an overview of the various scenarios for securing BNG and what role we think the LPA has in monitoring and enforcement for each of these."

https://www.local.gov.uk/pas/events/pas-past-events/biodiversity-net-gain-local-authorities/biodiversity-net-gain-faqs

^^^^ all sounds very complicated to me. The one thing that strikes me is that it is yet more bureaucracy creating jobs for yet more pen- pushers. Sorry, slightly off topic

In a sane society - you would be told to plant trees.  That you had done so would be checked and then a quick visit annually to ensure they are alive would suffice.

Noteven sure that it needs that.  A check every 5 yrs. w'd probably be OK.

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