Biodiversity Gain Plan in Warwickshire

Biodiversity Gain Plan in Warwickshire

Do you need a Biodiversity Gain Plan in Warwickshire before you can start work?

Where Biodiversity Net Gain applies, a Biodiversity Gain Plan becomes the legal document that allows work to begin. We put that plan together clearly, correctly and in a format councils approve, so your project moves ahead.

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 a Biodiversity Gain Plan in Warwickshire?

You’ll need a Biodiversity Gain Plan in Warwickshire if your planning permission includes a condition linked to Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG). The Biodiversity Gain Plan is the document that shows how the required biodiversity improvement will actually be delivered, how it will be maintained, and who is responsible for it.

Without an approved Biodiversity Gain Plan in place, many developments cannot legally begin, even where planning permission has already been granted.

Planning officers in Warwickshire most frequently require formal Biodiversity Gain Plan evidence where development affects:

  • Strategic housing and town expansion across Warwick, Leamington Spa, Rugby and Stratford-upon-Avon, including major residential allocations and mixed-use growth 
  • Logistics, employment and motorway-linked development along the M40, M6, A45 and West Coast rail corridor, particularly around Rugby and north Warwickshire 
  • Greenfield and agricultural land release across South Warwickshire, the Avon Valley and rural fringe settlements 
  • River corridors, floodplains and wetland networks associated with the River Avon, River Leam and River Anker 

If this evidence isn’t provided in the correct format, many planning applications aren’t validated at all, or they are delayed by conditions later in the process.

We provide Biodiversity Gain Plan services across: Warwick, Leamington Spa, Stratford-upon-Avon, Rugby, Nuneaton, Bedworth, Kenilworth, Alcester, Shipston-on-Stour, Atherstone and all surrounding towns, villages and rural areas across the county. 

Why Planning Authorities in Warwickshire Request a Biodiversity Gain Plan

Planning Authorities across Warwickshire require a Biodiversity Gain Plan because Biodiversity Net Gain is now a statutory requirement under the Environment Act 2021. The Plan provides the legally enforceable route for delivering biodiversity improvements tied to a specific planning permission. Without an approved Plan, the BNG condition cannot be lawfully discharged, and development cannot commence on site. 

Local Case Insight

On a mixed-use development in Warwickshire, planning permission was granted subject to a Biodiversity Net Gain condition. A structured Biodiversity Gain Plan was prepared, setting out on-site habitat creation and long-term delivery responsibilities. The condition was discharged on first review, allowing the development programme to proceed without delay.

How the Biodiversity Gain Plan Process Works

We prepare compliant, planning-ready Biodiversity Gain Plans that meet Warwickshire’s policy requirements and keep your BNG on track.

Key BNG Deliverables for Warwickshire Projects

Your Biodiversity Gain Plan is structured to meet Warwickshire‘s planning requirements and typically includes:

  • Habitat delivery strategy — how and where biodiversity uplift will be achieved

  • Mapped habitat parcels — legally reliable plans linking habitats to the approved metric

  • Optional integration with a Habitat Management & Monitoring Plan (HMMP) where 30-year management is required

  • Submission-ready planning document — formatted for Local Planning Authority approval

This ensures your BNG condition in Warwickshire can be discharged cleanly and lawfully.

Step 1

Initial Review

We assess your existing BNG assessment, site layout and planning condition.

Step 2

Plan Preparation

Habitat delivery proposals, mapping and management requirements are drafted.

Step 3

Coordination Stage

The plan is aligned with your build programme and any wider ecological or planning documents.

Step 4

Submission and Support

 We respond to any LPA queries or amendments required.

Next Steps

Ready to secure approval and start on site? We’ll confirm what your Warwickshire site needs and help you move forward without unnecessary delay. 

FAQ - BGP in Warwickshire

How does a Biodiversity Gain Plan support large housing allocations in Warwickshire?

On strategic housing allocations across Warwickshire, a Biodiversity Gain Plan demonstrates how the statutory 10 percent Biodiversity Net Gain will be achieved across the masterplan. It confirms how habitat units are calculated, delivered and legally secured prior to commencement.

No. Regardless of proximity to neighbouring authorities, developments within Warwickshire must comply with statutory Biodiversity Net Gain legislation. The relevant district council remains responsible for approving the Biodiversity Gain Plan.

Urban extensions must integrate habitat creation into green infrastructure networks, open space and drainage design. The Biodiversity Gain Plan must clearly demonstrate how uplift is delivered across the scheme rather than as isolated planting areas.

Where cumulative growth pressures reduce on site habitat delivery potential, developers may need to secure off site biodiversity units. The Biodiversity Gain Plan must confirm how the required uplift is achieved despite site constraints.

Where development lies near the River Avon corridor, the Biodiversity Gain Plan should demonstrate how riparian habitats are protected or enhanced. Habitat calculations must reflect realistic delivery and compatibility with flood risk requirements.

Which authorities approve Biodiversity Gain Plans in Warwickshire?

Approval is handled by the relevant Local Planning Authority, such as 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

Yes. Many larger schemes rely on a combination of on site habitat creation and off site biodiversity units. The Biodiversity Gain Plan must clearly demonstrate how the total uplift meets or exceeds the statutory requirement.

Infrastructure elements such as roads, schools and drainage can reduce habitat area. The Biodiversity Gain Plan must accurately reflect these land take impacts within the Biodiversity Metric calculations.

Delays often arise where metric calculations do not reflect the latest masterplan layout, habitat types are over specified or legal securing arrangements are unclear. Consistency across planning documents is critical.

ProHort prepares compliant Biodiversity Gain Plans tailored to Warwickshire’s strategic growth context. We ensure accurate metric modelling, realistic habitat proposals and clear legal securing mechanisms to reduce pre commencement approval risk.

Related Services