A political rift is forming within the Labour Party, centred around the government’s proposed Planning and Infrastructure Bill. While the aim is to streamline development and deliver much-needed housing, a growing number of Labour MPs are worried that it could come at the expense of Britain’s natural environment.
What’s the Controversy?
At the heart of the row is Part Three of the Bill, which would allow developers to fulfil their environmental obligations not by protecting habitats on-site, but by paying into a central nature restoration fund. In theory, this fund would be used for environmental improvements elsewhere – but critics fear it opens the door to “nature offsetting” that could be exploited.
Around two dozen Labour MPs have raised concerns, urging ministers to hold developers accountable by building over the one million homes that already have planning permission before making changes to existing environmental laws.
Chris Hinchliff Leads the Charge
One of the most vocal critics is Chris Hinchliff, Labour MP for North East Hertfordshire. He’s not pulling any punches. Hinchliff believes the current proposal allows developers to sidestep vital environmental protections, and he’s submitted several amendments to tighten rules around safeguarding nature and protected habitats.
He also called out a deeper issue within the housebuilding industry: land banking. Hinchliff claims that developers are sitting on land with planning permission, choosing not to build so they can gradually release new homes onto the market – a tactic he says inflates house prices. To stop this, he has proposed financial penalties for developers who fail to deliver on their planning commitments.
What the Experts Say
While Hinchliff’s frustration is widely shared, not everyone agrees with his take on developer behaviour. Dr Maya Singer Hobbs, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), offered a more nuanced view. She says developers aren’t purposely slowing down to block housebuilding – but they also have no incentive to flood the market and lower prices.
“Developers are legally bound to their shareholders,” she explained, “and building homes faster than the market can absorb isn’t in their interest. That said, there might be merit in exploring whether local councils should have the power to enforce a ‘use it or lose it’rule on planning permissions.”
A Tension Between Two Priorities
The debate highlights a growing tension in UK politics: the need to build more homes quickly versus the duty to protect wildlife and natural habitats. As the housing crisis worsens, pressure is mounting to get shovels in the ground. But at what cost?
Critics of the bill worry that nature-rich areas, many of which are already under pressure, could become casualties of fast-track planning reforms. Allowing developers to offset environmental responsibilities to another location or future time, they argue, undermines the principle of local environmental protection.
What Could Change?
The proposed amendments by Hinchliff and others signal an important moment for the Labour Party, but internal divisions may prompt party leaders to re-evaluate their stance on planning and environmental issues.
If accepted, these changes could include:
- Stronger legal requirements to protect habitats during development.
- ‘Use it or lose it’ clauses for planning permissions.
- Financial penalties for developers who delay builds without a reason.
What This Means for the Public
For homebuyers, renters, and local communities, this debate isn’t just politics – it’s personal. People want more homes, especially affordable ones, but they also want to live near green spaces, in areas where wildlife, woodlands, and wetlands are protected, not paved over.
The coming weeks will show whether Parliament finds a way to strike a better balance – one that doesn’t sacrifice nature in the rush to solve the housing crisis.









