
Strategic planning for green prosperity
Article
Land is a finite resource, and the demands made of it have only increased over time.
Not only do we need to house and feed more people, but also provide space for energy generation, areas for nature, places for climate mitigation, room for transport infrastructure.
The UK government has set itself objectives for housing, transport, energy and water infrastructure and delivering nature restoration; some of these will present challenges over prioritisation and require compromises. Planning is the key means that government has at its disposal to manage these tensions.
In this report, we argue that the objective should be to deliver high-quality housing that meets the needs of local communities, is future proofed, well connected to sustainable transport links, progresses legally binding net zero and environmental commitments, and has the buy-in of local people. To deliver this, strategic planning at national and regional or sub-regional levels will be essential.
You might also like ...
Skills passports: An essential part of a fair transition
This month, government will publish its Clean Energy Workforce Strategy. This plan covers two aims. First, filling the growing demand for skills in clean energy industries is essential to keep on track to reach the government’s clean power…Fairer is faster: The route to greener and healthier domestic transport
The government can speed up efforts to decarbonise transport by targeting the highest emitters.Everyday concerns: What people want from transport
Transport has a key role to play in achieving the UK government's missions and improving lives.