Fenland LPA BNG

Discover key habitats, BNG requirements, and planning guidance for developers in Fenland LPA Local Planning Authority.

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Fenland LPAFenland LPA

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Biodiversity Net Gain in Fenland LPA Local Planning Authority

West Berkshire, located in South East England, is a predominantly rural Local Planning Authority (LPA) known for its diverse natural environment and rich ecological heritage. Covering an area of approximately 704 square kilometres, the district includes a range of urban centres and rural settlements, with Newbury serving as the principal town. Other significant towns and villages within the LPA include Thatcham, Hungerford, Pangbourne, and Theale, each contributing to the area's distinctive landscape character and biodiversity value.

As part of its commitment to sustainable development, West Berkshire Council actively supports the implementation of Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) in line with the Environment Act 2021. Developers working within the LPA are required to deliver a minimum 10% net gain in biodiversity value for most developments, secured through habitat creation, enhancement, or approved off-site units.

West Berkshire encompasses several National Character Areas (NCAs), notably the North Wessex Downs and Thames Basin Heaths, each influencing the typical habitat types found in the region. These include ancient woodlands, chalk grasslands, river valleys, lowland mixed deciduous woodlands, and floodplain meadows—many of which are priority habitats under the UK Biodiversity Action Plan. This ecological diversity presents both opportunities and constraints for BNG delivery, requiring careful ecological assessment and strategic planning.

For developers, landowners, and planners operating within West Berkshire, understanding the LPA’s landscape, habitat distribution, and regional policy context is critical to meeting BNG obligations. Our team provides tailored support through BNG assessments, habitat mapping, and access to verified local BNG units and schemes.

To learn more about BNG opportunities in this area, contact us or register to be notified when local schemes become available.

Fenland, located in Cambridgeshire within the East of England, is a predominantly rural Local Planning Authority (LPA) encompassing some of the UK’s most distinctive low-lying agricultural landscapes. Covering around 547 square kilometres, the district includes market towns such as Wisbech, March, Chatteris, and Whittlesey, set within an extensive network of drained fenland, arable farmland, and watercourses.

Fenland District Council is implementing the Environment Act 2021’s Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) requirements. Most developments must achieve a minimum 10% net gain in biodiversity, delivered through on-site habitat creation, enhancement, or through verified off-site biodiversity units.

Fenland lies entirely within The Fens National Character Area, a landscape shaped by centuries of drainage and land reclamation. While intensive agriculture dominates, important ecological features remain, including wet ditches, reedbeds, washlands, species-rich field margins, and scattered fen-edge habitats. These features provide both challenges and unique opportunities for BNG delivery.

For developers and planners operating in Fenland, understanding the area's agricultural matrix, ecological sensitivities, and the BNG metric is essential for achieving compliance. Our team offers full BNG support including ecological assessments, metric reporting, and access to local and regional habitat banks.

Contact us or register to be notified of upcoming BNG opportunities across Fenland.

Habitats in Fenland LPA Local Planning Authority

West Berkshire’s landscape is shaped predominantly by the North Wessex Downs National Character Area (NCA 116), a chalk downland landscape of international ecological importance, and partly by the Thames Basin Heaths (NCA 129). These NCAs support a rich mosaic of habitats, many of which are priority habitats under BNG classifications and the UK Biodiversity Action Plan.

Grassland Habitats
Lowland calcareous grassland dominates the chalk ridge areas, supporting diverse plant species like orchids and wild thyme.
Lowland meadows are scattered along the Kennet Valley and floodplain, offering high biodiversity value, particularly for invertebrates and ground-nesting birds.
Areas of modified grassland are common in improved pastures and paddocks, but these hold lower BNG value unless enhanced.
In some acidic soils, lowland dry acid grassland and other lowland acid grassland can be found, especially on sandy substrates and heathland edges.

Woodland and Forest Habitats
The LPA contains extensive lowland mixed deciduous woodland, particularly on the clay-with-flints plateau and valley slopes, providing habitat for bats, dormice, and woodland birds.
Veteran trees and old estates feature wood-pasture and parkland, a rare and highly valued BNG habitat.
Areas of wet woodland, often associated with river valleys, add to the ecological complexity.

Heathland and Shrub
On the fringes of the Thames Basin Heaths, lowland heathland and mixed scrub are present, though often fragmented, supporting heathland birds like nightjar and Dartford warbler.

Wetland and Watercourse Habitats
The River Kennet, a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), provides priority river habitats and supports adjacent floodplain wetland mosaics.
Smaller ponds, reedbeds, and ditches are scattered across the landscape, particularly in floodplain areas.

Cropland Habitats
Much of West Berkshire’s agricultural land is under cereal crops or temporary grass and clover leys, but there is increasing scope to integrate arable field margins for biodiversity gain.

Hedgerows and Linear Features
The rural landscape is strongly characterised by native species-rich hedgerows, often associated with ditches and banks, which function as critical wildlife corridors under BNG classification.

Fenland’s landscape is dominated by highly managed agricultural land interspersed with valuable aquatic and wetland habitats.

Grassland Habitats

Lowland meadows and semi-natural grasslands are limited but occur along riverbanks, dykes, and rural fringes.

Improved grasslands are common on field edges and grazing areas, suitable for enhancement.

Woodland and Forest Habitats

Woodland cover is very limited; existing patches are typically plantation or small broadleaved copses.

Shelterbelts and tree rows planted for windbreaks offer some connectivity and ecological value.

Heathland and Shrub

Scrub and ruderal vegetation can be found on unmanaged land, brownfield areas, or road verges.

Wetland and Watercourse Habitats

Extensive networks of drainage ditches, dykes, and rivers (e.g., the Nene, Old Bedford, and Forty Foot Drain) support aquatic biodiversity.

Reedbeds and wetland mosaics exist in reserves and conservation projects (e.g., Ouse Washes SPA and Nene Washes SSSI).

Cropland Habitats

Arable land dominates the district. Significant BNG potential lies in arable field margins, beetle banks, cover crops, and fallow enhancement.

Hedgerows and Linear Features

Hedgerows are uncommon across most of the Fens but occasional species-rich lines persist in older field systems or near settlements.

Fenland LPA BNG Planning

For BNG delivery in West Berkshire, high and very high distinctiveness habitats such as lowland calcareous grassland, lowland meadows, wood-pasture, and priority rivers are particularly important to protect and enhance. Restoration or creation of such habitats provides the highest biodiversity uplift but also carries stricter requirements under the BNG metric.

Conversely, improving lower distinctiveness habitats, such as modified grassland or cropland through buffer planting, hedgerow enhancement, or field margin creation, offers practical options for on-site or local BNG contributions.

In Fenland, BNG delivery should prioritise enhancement of linear aquatic features (ditches, drains), creation of reedbeds and wet grassland, and restoration of lowland meadow habitats where feasible.

Given the scale of arable land, enhancing lower distinctiveness habitats such as improved grassland and arable field margins through buffer zones, wildflower strips, and native planting offers scalable BNG solutions. Off-site delivery and strategic partnerships with fenland habitat banks may be essential for larger developments.

Towns & Cities

Wisbech

March

Chatteris

Whittlesey

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