Biodiversity Net Gain Assessment in Warwickshire

Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) in Warwickshire

Planning-ready BNG assessments for Shropshire — verified baselines, Metric 4.0 scoring and proportionate uplift strategies for a predictable planning route.

Do You Need a Biodiversity Net Gain Assessment in Warwickshire?

Most developments in Warwickshire must now demonstrate a mandatory 10% Biodiversity Net Gain under the Environment Act 2021. Local planning authorities expect clear baseline data, a clean Metric 4.0 calculation and an uplift strategy aligned to real site constraints.

Warwickshire’s landscape brings a distinct ecological character — a combination of river corridors, clay farmland, historic parkland, woodland belts and canal networks. These wider patterns influence how LPAs interpret BNG and what they expect before validation.

Local landscape patterns affecting BNG expectations across Warwickshire include:

  • clay farmland, hedgerow networks and plateau landscapes across North Warwickshire and Nuneaton & Bedworth

  • floodplain meadows and riparian corridors along the Avon, Leam, Anker and Tame

  • woodland and parkland mosaics surrounding Warwick, Leamington Spa and Kenilworth

  • canal-side habitats along the Oxford Canal and Coventry Canal

  • restored mineral sites and early-successional land around Rugby and Central Warwickshire

These landscape patterns shape how uplift proposals are evaluated during planning.

We support projects across:
Warwick, Leamington Spa, Rugby, Nuneaton, Bedworth, Kenilworth, Stratford-upon-Avon, Atherstone, Coleshill and surrounding areas.

Why Warwickshire Planners Request BNG Evidence Early

Warwickshire LPAs request BNG evidence early because habitat condition and distinctiveness can vary significantly across short distances, especially in areas shaped by river systems, parkland edges and restored mineral land. Planners need clarity before design work becomes fixed, ensuring uplift is achievable and proportionate.

Early evidence prevents redesign cycles, avoids validation delays and reduces the risk of uplift recalculation later in the programme.

Early indicators your Warwickshire site may require BNG evidence

BNG Staffordshire Building and land

Common site-level features that trigger early BNG requirements include:

• semi-improved or species-rich grassland
• hedgerows feeding into wider ecological networks
• wet ditches, brooks or floodplain features
• brownfield or early-successional habitat patches
• woodland edges, scattered trees or parkland transitions
• PEA recommendations for botanical verification
• layout changes that alter habitat parcels

If any apply, early clarification keeps planning predictable and prevents disruption later.

Local Case Insight

BNG baseline work for a rural scheme near Kenilworth identified species-rich grassland pockets and hedgerow connectivity that significantly influenced uplift feasibility. By refining the layout and targeting enhancement within existing corridors, the project achieved 11% net gain on-site without off-site units, enabling a smooth validation process.Validation progressed smoothly with no requests for metric revision.

Our Approach

BNG must be practical, defensible and proportionate.
We align ecological evidence with real-world design constraints so your metric supports your planning route. We assess habitat condition, distinctiveness and connectivity to identify the most efficient uplift options, whether on-site, off-site or blended. For more detail on methodology, see our Biodiversity Net Gain Assessment service. 

For schemes requiring integrated landscape design or planting plans, we work alongside our sister company Blue Iris Landscapes to keep proposals aligned with uplift feasibility and LPA expectations.

Every recommendation is shaped for validation, design iteration and planning negotiation.

BNG Requirements — Delivered in a Predictable Sequence

We produce planning-ready BNG Assessments aligned to Warwickshire’s policy expectations.

Key BNG Deliverables for Warwickshire Projects

For Warwickshire schemes, every planning-ready BNG Assessment includes:

• verified UKHab baseline
• defensible Metric 4.0 calculation
• proportionate, locally-appropriate uplift strategy
• clear validation-ready reporting
• optional HMMP and Biodiversity Gain Plan integration
 

These deliverables are structured to satisfy Warwickshire LPAs while keeping your BNG route proportionate to the scale of development.

Step 1

Habitat baseline surveys

Year-round, with optimal survey seasons

Step 2

Metric 4.0 calculations

 Completed once habitat data is verified. 

Step 3

Uplift strategy development

Aligned with design progression and layout refinement.

Step 4

Integration with Other Surveys

Only if needed. PEA, EIA, and Protected Species surveys 

How this supports your project

These steps align with national requirements under NPPF Section 15 and ensure the BNG route remains defensible at planning. Early baseline clarity locks in feasible uplift routes, prevents late-stage reclassification, and keeps your planning programme on track. 

Next Steps

Contact us and we’ll confirm exactly what your site requires and support a planning-ready, proportionate route forward. 

FAQ - BNG in Warwickshire

What is a Biodiversity Net Gain assessment in Warwickshire?

A Biodiversity Net Gain assessment measures the existing ecological value of a site using the statutory Biodiversity Metric and calculates how proposed development will change that value. It confirms whether at least 10 percent measurable uplift can be achieved in accordance with national legislation.

A BNG assessment is required where development falls within the scope of mandatory Biodiversity Net Gain legislation. This typically includes housing schemes, mixed use allocations and employment developments across Warwickshire.

On greenfield or edge of settlement land, the assessment calculates baseline habitat units using habitat type, condition and area. The proposed layout is then modelled within the Biodiversity Metric to confirm whether at least 10 percent uplift is achieved.

A habitat survey in accordance with UK Habitat Classification is required to map and assess site habitats. Accurate condition assessment is critical to avoid over or under estimating baseline biodiversity units.

Sites near the River Avon may contain riparian habitats or floodplain grassland. The assessment must accurately classify these habitats and ensure any proposed enhancements are realistic and deliverable.

How long does a BNG assessment take for strategic housing sites?

Larger allocations often require iterative modelling alongside masterplanning. Depending on complexity, this may involve multiple metric scenarios to optimise layout and biodiversity outcomes.

Costs vary depending on site size, habitat diversity and the level of design iteration required. Straightforward sites are typically less complex than phased strategic schemes with multiple land parcels.

Many sites can achieve uplift through meadow creation, hedgerow enhancement, woodland planting and sustainable drainage features. However, feasibility depends on realistic baseline calculations and layout constraints.

The relevant Local Planning Authority reviews Biodiversity Net Gain assessments. This may include Warwick District Council, Stratford on Avon District Council, Rugby Borough Council or Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council depending on site location.

Planning guidance for Warwick District Council can be accessed at:
https://www.warwickdc.gov.uk/planning

ProHort provides detailed habitat surveys, Biodiversity Metric modelling and feasibility advice tailored to Warwickshire’s strategic growth context. We help developers and land promoters understand early stage risk, optimise layouts and avoid unexpected biodiversity unit shortfalls.

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