OS Enhanced Land Cover for BNG: key mapping takeaways for project teams
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on The Construction Index
30 Second Briefing
Ordnance Survey has launched OS Enhanced Land Cover (ELC) Beta, a national habitat-mapping dataset that fuses OS National Geographic Database topography, OS aerial imagery, OS Terrain 5 and third-party sources including Natural England’s Living England, the Rural Payments Agency’s Crop Map of England and UKHab classifications to support 10% Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) assessments. The tool enables desktop and field workflows for ecologists and developers, with Wessex Water using it via Linckia’s ESRI-based Habitat Fabric platform to assess hundreds of sites in a single spatial view. Linckia reports a 40% cut in data processing costs versus previous methods, rising to 90% compared with processing raw imagery, with OS claiming time savings of days to weeks per development across 1.5 million homes in the pipeline.
Technical Brief
- OS Enhanced Land Cover (ELC) Beta is explicitly aligned to the UKHab habitat classification standard.
- UKHab alignment means outputs directly feed the statutory biodiversity metric required under Defra’s BNG legislation.
- ELC aggregates OS National Geographic Database topography, OS aerial imagery and OS Terrain 5 into one habitat layer.
- Third‑party inputs include Natural England’s Living England and the Rural Payments Agency’s Crop Map of England.
- Wessex Water applies ELC via Linckia’s Habitat Fabric to inform 30‑year biodiversity uplift projections across its estate.
- Linckia delivers ELC through an ESRI‑based BNG application, adding ecology rulesets on top of OS basemaps.
- Reported cost savings are 40% versus earlier processed‑data workflows, and up to 90% versus raw imagery processing.
- OS positions ELC as a way to relieve ecologist capacity constraints created by government home‑building targets plus BNG law.
Our Take
This is one of only a handful of Software pieces in our coverage where Ordnance Survey tools are being used directly to operationalise statutory environmental targets in England, complementing earlier OS work on climate-driven flood risk mapping for strategic transport corridors.
The 10% biodiversity uplift target over a 30‑year projection period, combined with reported 40–90% reductions in data processing costs, signals that local authorities and utilities in the UK are likely to treat OS-aligned BNG datasets as a de facto standard for costed biodiversity accounting in housing pipelines of over a million units.
Given Defra, Natural England and the Rural Payments Agency are all named, this OS BNG mapping product effectively sits at the intersection of regulatory compliance and geospatial software, suggesting that future Software-category tools in the UK will need to interoperate with these datasets to be credible for BNG reporting on construction projects.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

