How England got to mandatory biodiversity net gain: A timeline
Alice Stuart, Alan Bond, Aldina M. A. Franco, Chris Gerrard, Julia Baker, Kerry ten Kate, Tom Butterworth, Joseph Bull, Jo Treweek

TL;DR
This paper outlines the timeline of how England implemented mandatory biodiversity net gain policy, highlighting key events and documents that shaped the policy.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed historical timeline of England's mandatory biodiversity net gain policy development.
Findings
Biodiversity net gain became mandatory in England in February 2024 through the Environment Act (2021).
The policy uses habitat attributes as a proxy for biodiversity and is the most extensive net outcome policy globally.
The paper identifies formative events and documents that influenced the policy's development.
Abstract
Biodiversity net gain (BNG) is a “net outcome” planning policy which aims for development projects to leave biodiversity in a better state than before they started. Understanding the origins and history of existing mandatory BNG is necessary to understand the drivers and barriers that have influenced the policy to date and could inform the development and implementation of future BNG policies. Biodiversity net gain legislation was first discussed in Parliament in England through the passage of the Environment Act (2021) and became a mandatory requirement for most terrestrial and intertidal developments in February 2024. The policy uses habitat attributes as a proxy for biodiversity and represented the widest reaching net outcome policy in the world at the point of its introduction. As such, it is expected to have a significant impact on future land use decisions in England. This paper…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnvironmental Conservation and Management · Land Use and Ecosystem Services · Coastal and Marine Management
