Title: Future ecological planning
1Future ecological planning
- Carolyn Harrison
- Emeritus Professor,
- Department of Geography
- University College London
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3Ecological planning
- The purpose of ecological planning is to
- make collective choices about the states of
the environment we want, prevent breaches of
environmental constraints and make adaptations
possible when such constraints have been
breached
4Lecture outline
- Briefly review the environmental and ecological
consequences of Londons muddled growth - Introduce the RCEPs 23rd Report 2002 on
Environmental Planning as a framework - Review The London Plan in terms of the RCEPs
recommendations - Speculate tentatively about future ecological
planning
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11Metropolitan Green Belt
12The environmental and ecological consequences of
muddled growth
- A distinctive urban environment polluted land,
air and water, with a heat island, flash floods - A substantial green estate quality and
character reflect urban density and disturbance - A fragmented green matrix of semi-natural and
largely artificial habitats garden escapes
abound - Poor quality inner city environments
- A global ecological footprint far exceeding its
fair share
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16Brent reservoir urbanisation and disturbance
effects (Batten)
1833 72 bird species Reservoir beyond the urban edge
1970 47 species 65 of catchment urbanised
1980 20 species 100 urbanised ( only birds tolerant of disturbance survive)
17London Index of Deprivation
18Londons ecological footprint
- The area of resource use, on a per capita basis,
required to support the city - 293 times the size of the city itself- an area
the size of Spain! - Per capita footprint in terms of global resources
is c. 6.3 global hectares our earth share is
only 2.18 global hectares - Londons profligate use of resources in
comparison to its fair share is unsustainable
19RCEP Environmental Planning
- Found a proliferation of plans on different
topics and spatial scales - Absence of an integrated, holistic approach to
planning - A predict and provide' approach that
marginalized the environment - In the context of sustainable development a
system that was not fit for purpose
20Royal Commission on Environmental
PollutionRecommendations
- Clearer policies and objectives for the
environment - Statutory recognition of planning in protecting
and enhancing the environment goals and targets - The introduction of holistic spatial planning
covering all aspects of sustainable development - Much improved availability of environmental
information - Engage a wider range of people in decisions about
setting and achieving environmental goals so that
the public trust the planning process.
21The purpose of town and country planning and its
statutory role
- to facilitate the achievement of legitimate
economic and social goals whilst ensuring that
the quality of the environment is safeguarded
and, whenever appropriate, enhanced. - (RCEP 23rd Report
para 8.33) - Statutory role of planning is to develop and set
agreed environmental goals and targets -
22Spatial strategies
- Integrated Spatial strategies should be four
dimensional addressing environmental capacity - the atmosphere
- ground water
- the land surface and
- should look into the future 20-30 years
23Recommendations continued
- All aspects of land use should be included for
example, proposed development should take account
of pressures placed on environmental resources
aggregates and water supply, waste disposal,
biodiversity,energy requirements etc. - Improved accessibility of information to assist
in target setting and achievement - Greater public participation as a means of
gaining public confidence in the planning process
24The London Plan 2004
- Is consistent with many of these recommendations
- Takes a long term perspective 25 years
- A spatial plan addressing all land uses
- Sets clear targets for environmental policies
- Establishes base line information against which
progress can be made - Involved many groups in consultation and was
scrutinised in public
25Five main environmental strategies in the London
Plan
- Waste EU requires alternatives to landfill by
2010 a recycling target of 25 plus re-use
and waste reduction - Air quality congestion charge vehicular
emission standards to be met increase public
transport proposed central Low Emission Zone - Biodiversity key species and site protection
- Energy reduce CO2 by 20 relative to 1990 level
by 2010 introduce zero-carbon developments
sustainable construction practices - Noise reducing ambient levels
26Ecological assumptions underpinning the
environmental strategies
- Efficiency of resource use including land
recycling, high density development, re-use of
waste - Greater self-sufficiency - in energy
production, consuming more of its own waste - Reducing levels of waste, pollution, and
environmental degradation
27An exemplary, sustainable world city?The basic
assumptions of The London Plan
- Has to welcome all expected growth in GDP and in
population - Has to concentrate incremental employment in the
central area - Has to expand transport networks to support this
structure - All growth has to fit within the Green Belt a
compact city
28Necessary powers for implementation or
patronage, persuasion, and publicity ?
- The Mayor has limited powers no significant tax
raising powers - Has to work in partnership with Londons
functional bodies London Development Agency
Transport for London, - The 32 London Boroughs responsible for their own
local plans that should conform to the London
Plan, - Plus a host of other statutory organisations,NGOs
and the voluntary sector
29Connecting with Londons Nature
30Thinking ecologically .the SINC approach
- Maintaining and enhancing biodiversity
conservation the intrinsic value of nature and
nature that is distinctively urban - Valuing nature for all the benefits it affords
society the multiple values approach - Access to high quality natural areas as a matter
of social equality Areas of deficiency in
access to wildspace - A robust system fit for purpose - SINCs are
recognised in the London Plan
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32Biodiversity Targets
- There is no net loss of important wildlife
habitat - That a net reduction is achieved in the Area of
Deficiency of accessible wildlife sites - No net loss - losses have occurred and will
continue to occur but will new sites be added of
equivalent quality and accessibility? - Reduction in Areas of Deficiency? are being
monitored and a base line has been established,
but how to deliver in practice?
33Section 106 Agreements or Planning Gain
- Entered into by LPA and a developer to deliver
public benefit were development to go ahead. - No third party enters negotiations so the process
lacks transparency and fairness - National studies show 106s little used for
biodiversity benefits off site - In London they are routinely used for social
housing benefits and occasionally for green roofs - Inadequate for delivering larger scale
environmental benefits
34Conclusions
- A market led Planning System prevails not
driven by a central concern for the environment - Predict and provide continues - pressures put
on natural resources are not fully counted - A stronger planning system is needed habitat
fragmentation will increase areas deficient in
access to greenspace are unlikely to be reduced
sustainable construction practices will
marginalize biodiversity collective needs
reliant on Section 106s will be insufficiently
funded..
35Who is leading on ecological planning?
- The EU - on air and water quality, carbon
trading, habitat conservation sustainability
assessment - The Mayor and his team - on congestion charging,
low emissions zone, energy efficient construction
in the public sector - Central Government - lagging behind on climate
change on mandatory sustainable construction
practices changes to the Planning System have
not been holistic or fundamental enough to put
an ecological approach at its centre.
36The future ?
- We are already confronting the consequences of
breaching environmental capacity manifest in
global climate change and rising sea levels. - To adapt we will require a stronger planning
system that puts environment and ecology at its
centre.