|
Planning - Environmental Impact |
|
|
Environmental Impact Assessments were introduced in 1999 in order to
comply with EU requirements. Until recently, developers would only be
expected to prepare one EIA, which would be submitted with the application
for full or outline planning permission. This was because the grant of full
or outline planning consent was considered to be the point at which the
proposed development was authorised. The important point was that any
subsequent consents (eg approval of reserved matters under an outline
consent, or approval of details) did not require a new EIA, since the principle
of the development had already been authorised.
However, that approach was queried in Barker [2006] , the issue then being
referred to the ECJ, who decided that development carried out under an
outline planning consent should be viewed as a multi-stage project. Thus,
a development will not be fully authorised until the developer has reserved
matters approval, and perhaps even had conditions discharged. The result is
that an EIA might have to be submitted with a reserved matters application,
or even with an application to discharge certain conditions.
In response to that ECJ decision, we now have new amendments to the 1999
Regs to make UK planning law compatible with EU requirements. Developers
will have to rethink when they need to submit an EIA; whereas previously
they only needed to check whether an EIA was needed and, if so, submit one
alongside the planning application, they will now need to decide whether
they need to submit further EIAs at the same time as submitting applications
for reserved matters (or applications for approval of details under a precommencement
condition). The end result is that EIAs could now be needed
where they previously would not have been required. [2008] 211 Property
Law Journal 10. © Practical Lawyer
|
|
July 2008 |