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Biodiversity Enhancement Plans in Kent

Biodiversity Enhancement Plan in Kent

Need to show biodiversity improvements in Kent?

We prepare clear, planning-ready Biodiversity Enhancement Plans that meet local policy expectations and keep your application moving.

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 I need a Biodiversity Enhancement Plan in Kent?

In many cases, planning officers in Kent request clear biodiversity improvements even where statutory Net Gain is not being applied. A Biodiversity Enhancement Plan sets out what will be delivered, where it will happen, and how it supports local planning policy — in a proportionate, approvable format. 

Planning-first. Proportionate. Submission-ready. 

Across Kent, biodiversity enhancement information is most often requested where development involves:

  • Settlement expansion and village infill

  • Small brownfield redevelopment sites

  • Rural fringe development affecting hedgerows or grassland

  • Land near watercourses or green infrastructure networks

In Kent, enhancements are commonly used to demonstrate alignment with biodiversity policy.

We assist with Biodiversity Enhancement Plan submissions across Maidstone, Canterbury, Ashford, Dartford, Tunbridge Wells, Folkestone and surrounding areas across Kent.

Why Local Planning Authorities in Kent Require Biodiversity Enhancement

Planning authorities across Kent require biodiversity enhancement to meet duties set out in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), which expects development to protect and enhance biodiversity and deliver measurable environmental benefits. Local Plans across Kent reflect this requirement, even where statutory Biodiversity Net Gain is not being formally applied. 

In practice, Biodiversity Enhancement Plans in Kent are used to support validation, policy compliance and decision-making, particularly on smaller, exempt or edge-case schemes. They give planning officers confidence that biodiversity has been properly addressed in line with planning policy, without triggering unnecessary statutory processes. The focus remains on clear, proportionate delivery rather than technical escalation. 

Local Case Insight

A modest housing scheme near a Kent village was required to demonstrate biodiversity improvement in line with local policy. A Biodiversity Enhancement Plan detailed hedgerow reinforcement, grassland enhancement and integrated wildlife features. The proposals delivered clear ecological benefits without invoking statutory Net Gain requirements. Planning permission was supported without further ecological conditions.

The Process - Biodiversity Enhancement Plans

Our Biodiversity Enhancement service delivers clear, planning-compliant solutions that manage ecological constraints effectively while supporting smooth and efficient project delivery.

Key Deliverables for Biodiversity Enhancement Plans in Kent

As part of a Biodiversity Enhancement Plan for Kent, we provide: 

Clear enhancement layout plans showing where features will be delivered on site 

Defined enhancement features and specifications, including integrated or retrofitted measures 

Practical management requirements to ensure features remain effective once installed 

Planning-ready justification aligned with local and national biodiversity policy 

Step 1

Site & Planning Review

Review of the site and planning context to confirm level of enhancement.

Step 2

Enhancement Strategy

Realistic biodiversity improvements are defined and aligned with layout and landscape proposals.

Step 3

Plan Preparation

A concise, submission-ready Biodiversity Enhancement Plan is prepared.

Step 4

Planning Support

We support responses to planning officer or ecology queries to assist validation or approval.

Next Steps

Been asked for biodiversity improvements by the council in Kent? 

We’ll confirm what’s required and deliver a proportionate Biodiversity Enhancement Plan that planning officers can approve. 

FAQ - Biodiversity Enhancement Plans in Kent

What is a Biodiversity Enhancement Plan for development in Kent?

A Biodiversity Enhancement Plan is a planning stage document that explains how a proposed development in Kent will deliver measurable ecological improvements beyond the existing site baseline. It outlines habitat creation, landscape integration and green infrastructure measures designed to achieve biodiversity uplift in line with local planning policy.

Kent district and borough councils commonly request biodiversity enhancement information at planning application stage where development affects existing habitats or where policy requires ecological improvement. Early preparation alongside ecological surveys helps demonstrate compliance.

Where development is located on or near chalk grassland or downland landscapes, enhancement proposals must reflect local soil conditions and habitat character. The Enhancement Plan should demonstrate that proposed habitats are ecologically realistic and compatible with existing landscape features.

On sites influenced by coastal plains or marshland conditions, biodiversity proposals must account for hydrology and soil characteristics. Measures may include wet grassland creation, native planting buffers and habitat focused drainage systems suited to local conditions.

Kent contains several strategic housing and infrastructure growth corridors. On larger schemes, the Enhancement Plan should demonstrate how biodiversity is integrated across the masterplan through green corridors, structural planting and habitat connectivity linking to surrounding countryside.

Can agricultural land be enhanced as part of development?

Yes. Many Kent sites involve improved pasture or arable land. Enhancement proposals may include species rich grassland creation, hedgerow reinforcement, woodland belts and pond creation where appropriate. The plan must define measurable biodiversity outcomes.

Where Biodiversity Net Gain legislation applies, enhancement proposals must align with Biodiversity Metric calculations submitted with the planning application. The plan should clearly demonstrate how proposed habitats contribute to measurable uplift.

Sustainable drainage features can provide ecological value when designed with habitat objectives in mind. Swales, basins and attenuation ponds should support biodiversity rather than function solely as engineering solutions. The Enhancement Plan must clearly define these objectives.

Common issues include unrealistic habitat proposals for chalk or coastal soils, generic landscaping language, failure to demonstrate measurable biodiversity uplift and inconsistencies between ecological reports and layout drawings.

Developers should consult the relevant district or borough planning portal. For example, Canterbury City Council planning guidance is available at https://www.canterbury.gov.uk/planning-and-building-control/.

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