Vast majority of ‘grey belt’ homes to be built on unspoilt countryside, CPRE research reveals
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New analysis shows 88% of homes in major 'grey belt'
developments granted permission by government inspectors will be
built on previously undeveloped Green
Belt countryside, including high-quality farmland and a
Local Wildlife Site. When the ‘grey belt' policy was
introduced in December 2024, the government gave
‘disused petrol stations' and ‘abandoned car parks' as examples
of 'grey...Request free trial
New research from CPRE, the countryside charity, reveals that the government's ‘grey belt' policy is paving the way for large-scale development on England's unspoilt rural landscapes – not, as ministers promised, unused car parks and derelict petrol stations. Since the policy was introduced in December 2024, 13 developments of ten or more homes have been approved by government planning inspectors on ‘grey belt' land in the Green Belt. The approvals have been granted over the heads of local councils. Of the 1,250 homes these schemes will deliver, 88% will be built on previously undeveloped countryside. These developments make up more than 90% of homes granted planning permission on ‘grey belt' sites by inspectors. A further 21 smaller schemes, totalling no more than 91 homes, comprise the remainder. In December 2024, when the policy was introduced, the government gave ‘disused petrol stations' and ‘abandoned car parks' as examples of sites in the Green Belt that could be considered ‘grey belt' and released for development. In April 2024, Sir Keir Starmer described ‘grey belt' land as ‘poor-quality scrubland, mothballed on the outskirts of town', as well as previously developed land such as disused petrol stations and car parks. He promised: ‘We'll prioritise ugly, disused grey belt land, and set tough new conditions for releasing that land.' A very different reality has been borne out in practice. Approval has been granted, for example, for 57 houses on some of the country's best-quality farmland, in Tonbridge, Kent. In Castle Point, Essex, 47 houses have been granted planning permission on a designated Local Wildlife Site. Both examples comprise Green Belt land now considered ‘grey belt'. Earlier this year, other CPRE research demonstrated that there is enough previously developed land in England for 1.4 million new homes, of which almost half have already been granted planning permission. This shows that the government can move quickly towards its UK-wide target of 1.5 million new homes with limited development on unspoilt countryside. Targeting the Green Belt is a choice, not a necessity. CPRE is calling on the government to:
CPRE chief executive Roger Mortlock said: ‘In practice, the government's “grey belt” policy has not been about building on petrol stations but an existential threat to the protections of the Green Belt. ‘Our latest research shows that the policy is vague, subjective and misleading to the public. Its lack of clarity has been good news for large housebuilders but bad news for everyone who loves the countryside.
‘We know from CPRE branches across the country that the situation is getting worse, as local authorities are so desperate to meet revised housing targets that they are forced to approve speculative development in the Green Belt.'
CPRE policy lead Emma
Marrington said: 'The Green Belt is the countryside next door for almost 30
million people in this country. As well as having
some of the country's best-quality farmland and most important
wildlife habitats, these places around our largest towns and
cities play a vital role in helping to
deliver the government's target of 30%
of land protected for nature by
2030. ‘We've got to stand up for England's Green Belt. Once it's lost, it's lost for good.'
Case study: Tonbridge,
Kent
Case study: Benfleet, Castle
Point, Essex ENDS The data quoted in this release can be accessed here: https://www.cpre.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/CPRE-grey-belt-appeals-data-tables.xlsx |
