Telephone: 0800 494 7479

Ecological Method Statements in Somerset

Ecological Method Statements in Somerset

Need to start works without triggering a planning breach?

An Ecological Method Statement sets out the on-site controls planners expect before clearance, groundworks or demolition begin.

Fast, Clear, Planning-Ready Support

Fast response 

Calls answered in 2 rings, emails replied to within the hour.

Free expert advice

Clear guidance before you commit.

Cost-effective

Working in partnership with clients to ensure planning approval first time

Typical 10-day turnaround

Industry Leading Standard

Expert Team

We stay with you from first call through to submission. 

Do you need an Ecological Method Statement in Somerset?

If your Somerset project has ecology conditions, protected species survey findings, sensitive habitats, or clearance works that could affect wildlife, an Ecological Method Statement is often the document that unlocks the next stage. It turns survey findings and planning conditions into a clear set of instructions that contractors can follow on site, so your programme stays compliant and predictable. 

It is also the quickest way to remove “unknowns” before works start, especially when enabling works, access, service runs, or vegetation clearance sit on the critical path. 

These statements aren’t just for major developments. 
Homeowners, architects and developers are frequently asked for Ecological Method Statements where planning conditions cover how work is carried out, including protection measures or installations such as swift bricks, bird boxes or bat boxes. 

These Somerset landscape features regularly influence what needs to be controlled on site:

  • Bath, Taunton and Yeovil: urban and suburban sites, brownfield land, and remnant green spaces often require carefully sequenced clearance and pre-start checks.

  • Mendip Hills, Quantock Hills and Exmoor fringes: limestone grassland, heathland, ancient woodland, and hedgerows frequently introduce timing restrictions and buffer requirements.

  • River Parrett, Avon and Brue corridors: riparian habitats and floodplains often require structured on-site ecological controls.

  • Rural villages and edge-of-settlement sites: mature trees, traditional boundaries, and pasture mosaics create multiple ecological “touchpoints” during enabling works.

  • Former industrial or reclaimed sites: brownfield mosaics and scrub habitats often need exclusion zones and monitoring.

These features do not confirm constraints on their own. They explain why Somerset sites are frequently conditioned for practical on-site ecological controls.

We prepare Ecological Method Statements for projects across Somerset, supporting homeowners, architects, and developers where planning conditions require clear ecological controls on site.

Why Planning Authorities Require Ecological Method Statements in Somerset

Somerset planning authorities require Ecological Method Statements where construction activity could affect habitats or protected species. They are used to demonstrate compliance with the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017, the Environment Act 2021, and NPPF Section 15 before works begin on site. 

LPAs rely on method statements to confirm that clearance, demolition, groundworks and mitigation will be carried out in line with approved surveys, licences and planning conditions. A clear Ecological Method Statement gives planners confidence that ecological risk will be actively controlled during construction, not managed retrospectively. 

Local Case Insight

A Somerset development site near a river corridor and rural fringe was subject to pre-commencement ecology conditions. A method statement was prepared to translate survey recommendations into clear site instructions, including habitat protection, pre-start checks, and sequencing of clearance works. By defining responsibilities and working practices upfront, the project team could progress efficiently while providing the planning authority with confidence that ecological risks were managed throughout the early stages of construction.

The Process - Ecological Method Statements

Our Ecological Method Statements are planning-led and practical, designed to control ecological risk on site while allowing construction to proceed efficiently and compliantly. 

Key Deliverables for Method Statements in Somerset

A discharge-ready method statement aligned to Staffordshire planning expectations and your condition wording. 

A site-usable control plan that contractors can follow without guesswork. 

A clear sequencing logic that protects your start date and avoids avoidable pauses. 

Integration with related ecology work so the method statement supports your PEA, protected species outputs, BNG documents, or construction compliance where applicable. 

Step 1

Scope to the Permission

Review of planning conditions, survey findings and construction sequencing. 

Step 2

Define Site Controls

Clear instructions for timing, protection measures, exclusion zones and responsibilities on site.

Step 3

Planning-ready Statement

A concise document written for condition discharge and practical site use.

Step 4

Integrate with Wider Ecology

Aligned with PEAs, protected species surveys, licences, BNG or other surveys as required.

Next Steps

If your Somerset project needs condition discharge or clear on-site controls before works start, we’ll confirm what’s required and produce a method statement that is usable on site and acceptable to planners. 

FAQ - Ecological Method Statements in Somerset

Why are ecological method statements commonly required in Somerset?

Somerset includes river corridors, rural landscapes, and protected hills, so LPAs often require evidence that ecological features are safeguarded during construction.

 

 

Yes. Even modest developments may affect hedgerows, field margins, or watercourse habitats, triggering ecology conditions.

 

They usually cover vegetation clearance, enabling works, and early construction phases where ecological risks are greatest.

 

Can a method statement rely on existing surveys?

Yes. It converts ecological survey findings into practical, site-specific instructions for contractors and planners.

 

Yes. A single well-structured statement can address several ecology-related conditions, streamlining approval.

 

  • Planning decision notice or draft conditions
  • Red line boundary/site plan
  • Description of proposed works
  • Programme and anticipated start dates
  • Any completed ecological survey reports

Related Services