Do you need to secure long-term habitat compliance in Solihull following Biodiversity Net Gain approval?
We produce council-ready HMMPs that secure habitat delivery and 30-year monitoring, keeping your development compliant well beyond construction.
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Where Biodiversity Net Gain applies, an HMMP is required to legally secure how habitats will be managed and monitored for 30 years after development. In Solihull, you will need an HMMP if your planning permission includes a biodiversity condition that requires long-term habitat creation or enhancement.
Planning officers in Solihull most frequently require formal HMMP evidence where development affects or delivers:
Urban and residential regeneration across Solihull Town Centre, Shirley, and Chelmsley Wood
Residential expansion in areas such as Knowle, Balsall Common, and Monkspath
Commercial, industrial, and infrastructure developments near the M42, A41, and A34 corridors
Sites adjacent to sensitive ecological assets, including Meriden Park, Elmdon Park, Arden Woodlands, and Solihull’s wider green belt and canal networks
If this long-term management evidence is not secured in the correct format, biodiversity conditions cannot be formally discharged.
We provide Habitat Management & Monitoring Plans across: Solihull Town Centre, Shirley, Chelmsley Wood, Knowle, Balsall Common, Monkspath, and all surrounding towns, villages, and rural locations across the Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council area.
Planning Authorities across Solihull require HMMPs to secure the 30-year delivery of habitats created through Biodiversity Net Gain, as set out under the Environment Act 2021. The HMMP provides the legally enforceable framework for management, monitoring, and reporting. Without an approved HMMP, long-term biodiversity obligations remain legally unsecured. In Solihull, HMMPs are particularly important for sites near the green belt or ecological corridors, where careful habitat management can help protect and enhance local biodiversity. They ensure that habitat creation and enhancement are maintained over time, providing confidence to both developers and planning authorities that biodiversity commitments will be achieved.
We produce Habitat Management & Monitoring Plans aligned to Solihull policy expectations.
Your HMMP is structured to meet statutory planning requirements in Solihull and typically includes:
Habitat management objectives and prescriptions — how each habitat will be maintained and enhanced
30-year maintenance schedule — practical, year-by-year actions
Monitoring framework and reporting structure — how success is measured and documented
Legal responsibility and delivery framework — aligned with planning conditions, legal agreements, or conservation covenants
This ensures long-term ecological compliance is secured, auditable, and enforceable.
Assessment of BNG conditions, site layout and approved biodiversity proposals.
Habitat prescriptions, maintenance actions and monitoring schedules are set out.
Alignment with build-out, handover or responsible body arrangements.
LPA queries or amendments are managed through to approval.
Ready to secure long term biodiversity compliance in Solihull? Contact us today. We’ll confirm whether an HMMP is required and ensure your biodiversity obligations remain secure for the full 30-year term.
No—only projects that trigger Biodiversity Net Gain or include habitat creation/enhancement conditions require an HMMP.
No official template exists, but HMMPs must follow Environment Act 2021 standards and include clear management, monitoring, and reporting frameworks.
Yes—most HMMPs are provided when discharging biodiversity-related planning conditions.
Yes—off-site units must also be supported by a compliant 30-year HMMP to secure long-term delivery.
HMMPs must be produced by a competent ecologist with experience in long-term habitat management and Biodiversity Net Gain legislation.
Yes—revisions can be made if ecological conditions change, but updates usually need council approval to remain compliant.