Geomechanics.io

  • Free Tools
Sign UpLog In

Geomechanics.io

Geomechanics, Simplified.

© 2026 Geomechanics.io. All rights reserved.

Geomechanics.io

CMRR-ioGEODB-ioHYDROGEO-ioQCDB-ioFree Tools & CalculatorsBlogLatest Industry News

Industries

MiningConstructionTunnelling

Company

Terms of UsePrivacy PolicyLinkedIn
    Standard/Guideline
    Sustainability

    Reed planning reform proposals: key implications for UK project teams and designers

    December 17, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Reed planning reform proposals: key implications for UK project teams and designers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    Government proposals to revise the National Planning Policy Framework include a presumption in favour of housing near railway stations, support for high-rise residential blocks in urban areas, and widening the Building Safety Levy exemption from schemes of 10 homes to 50 homes (or from 30 to 120 student bed spaces). Smaller sites would be exempt from biodiversity net gain rules, and “swift bricks” for nesting swifts are set to be embedded in policy. The 123‑page consultation, posing 225 questions and running to 10 March 2026, keeps national policy non-statutory, prompting mixed views on planning certainty.

    Technical Brief

    • Consultation document runs to 123 pages and poses 225 detailed questions to stakeholders.
    • Consultation window is unusually long, closing on 10 March 2026, affecting project pipeline timing.
    • Government explicitly keeps National Planning Policy Framework as non-statutory guidance, not a legal decision basis.
    • Levelling Up and Regeneration Act 2023 powers to make statutory policies are deliberately not activated.
    • Steve Reed reiterates target of delivering 1.5 million new homes, framing capacity expectations for local plans.
    • Government signals willingness to revisit NPPF legal status if current reforms fail to change decision outcomes.

    Our Take

    The 1.5 million homes target in England puts this UK Government reform in the same scale bracket as the largest housing-policy items in our Policy category, signalling that planning and levy tweaks will be judged against national supply outcomes rather than incremental local gains.

    The proposed widening of Building Safety Levy exemptions for small sites is likely to be closely watched by members of the Federation of Master Builders, as our database shows most SME-focused UK policy coverage clusters around viability of sub‑50 home schemes in the Midlands and North.

    With 225 consultation questions over 123 pages and a horizon running to March 2026, this sits at the more complex end of the 44 Policy stories in our coverage, suggesting that responses from bodies like the RTPI and British Property Federation will need significant technical input rather than high-level lobbying alone.

    Geotechnical Software for Modern Teams

    Centralise site data, logs, and lab results with GEODB-io, CMRR-io, and HYDROGEO-io.

    No credit card required.

    • Save and export unlimited calculations
    • Advanced data visualisation
    • Generate professional PDF reports
    • Cloud storage for all your 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.

    Related Articles

    ISA seabed mining rules: benefit-sharing deadlock explained for project teams
    Policy
    3 days ago

    ISA seabed mining rules: benefit-sharing deadlock explained for project teams

    Deep seabed mining remains legally blocked after legal scholars Aline Jaeckel and Erik van Doorn argued that the International Seabed Authority cannot approve exploitation in areas like the Clarion-Clipperton Zone until separate benefit-sharing regulations, controlled by the ISA Assembly, are adopted. The ISA’s Finance Committee only produced a first draft benefit-sharing framework in 2024, centred on a Common Heritage Fund, while about 40 countries now support a moratorium and African states oppose using shared funds for remediation. Companies including The Metals Company, Impossible Metals and Lockheed Martin are advancing CCZ plans despite this regulatory deadlock.

    UK boom lifts anti-dumping probe: procurement and safety notes for engineers
    Policy
    11 days ago

    UK boom lifts anti-dumping probe: procurement and safety notes for engineers

    An anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigation has been opened by the UK Trade Remedies Authority into Chinese-made boom lifts, following a complaint from UK manufacturer Niftylift. The probe covers telescopic and articulated boom lifts, including sub-assemblies, with working heights of 6 m and above, such as models like the Dingli BT44HRT now entering the UK market. Scissor lifts, forklifts, vertical mast lifts, mobile self-propelled cranes and motor vehicles with integrated boom or scissor assemblies are explicitly excluded, so procurement teams must check machine classifications carefully.

    Engineers Against Poverty chair: governance, carbon and cost lessons for project teams
    Policy
    11 days ago

    Engineers Against Poverty chair: governance, carbon and cost lessons for project teams

    Engineers Against Poverty chair Richard Threlfall calls for the engineering, infrastructure and construction profession to lead on cutting whole‑life emissions and controlling capital cost overruns in major civils programmes. He argues that effective infrastructure governance must move beyond compliance to active stewardship of carbon, cost and social outcomes, with engineers shaping procurement models and performance metrics rather than leaving them to financiers and policymakers. For practitioners, this signals greater responsibility for transparent cost baselines, carbon accounting and value-for-money evidence on large public works.

    Related Industries & Products

    Mining

    Geotechnical software solutions for mining operations including CMRR analysis, hydrogeological testing, and data management.

    Construction

    Quality control software for construction companies with material testing, batch tracking, and compliance management.

    CMRR-io

    Streamline coal mine roof stability assessments with our cloud-based CMRR software featuring automated calculations, multi-scenario analysis, and collaborative workflows.

    HYDROGEO-io

    Comprehensive hydrogeological testing platform for managing, analysing, and reporting on packer tests, lugeon values, and hydraulic conductivity assessments.

    GEODB-io

    Centralised geotechnical data management solution for storing, accessing, and analysing all your site investigation and material testing data.

    AllGeotechnicalMiningInfrastructureMaterialsHazardsEnvironmentalSoftwarePolicy