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The Department for Environment Food
and Rural Affairs (Defra) and
environmental regulators are working to improve how
they regulate, balancing the government's
environmental goals with enabling economic
growth.
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The regulators – the
Environment Agency (EA) and Natural England
(NE) – have faced challenges including
the constraints of the legislative framework
they operate within, limited strategic
support from Defra, data limitations and
outdated IT systems
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The NAO outlines a series of
recommendations to ensure a coherent, whole-system approach to
maximise the benefits of these reforms
As Defra and the two
largest environmental regulators, the Environment Agency (EA) and
Natural England (NE), embark on a period of reform they face
several challenges, and success will depend on a
joined-up, strategic approach, says the National Audit Office
(NAO) in a new
report.
Over the past two years,
Defra and the regulators have increased their focus on
improving how they regulate and have set up a series of
reform programmes. Three recent major
reviews1 have added
momentum for reform.
In total, the three reviews make 149
recommendations to Defra or its arm's-length
bodies. Alongside responding to these recommendations, Defra
and its arm's-length bodies are responsible for more
than 3,000 pieces of legislation, leading to complexity for both
regulators and regulated businesses.
The NAO's report, Environmental
Regulation, highlights this complexity and
the challenges that face Defra and the
regulators as they embark on their reforms.
The report says that an overly
cautious and risk-averse culture in Defra and the
regulators has developed, in part due to the potential for
legal challenge, and this has restricted some efforts to innovate
and embrace new approaches.
Defra's approach to environmental
regulation in recent years has been shaped by the 2021
Environment Act targets and 2023 Environmental Improvement Plan
commitments, however at times it has been reactive
rather than based on a clear strategy, focusing on short-term
priorities or high-profile issues.
This has sometimes led
to Defra being slow to act when the regulators suggest
regulatory changes or system improvements that would produce
better outcomes or cut costs.
The regulators have introduced some
joint-working projects effectively, where they have
similar areas of regulatory responsibility. But Defra and
the regulators have not rolled this approach out more
widely, mainly due to systemic barriers
including legislative
requirements, data protection issues and cultural
differences between regulators.
The ability of EA and NE to regulate
in a consistent and well-targeted way has been
constrained in part by outdated IT
systems. While Defra is working to
improve its digital technologies, it has
been slow to modernise its
systems and it is only part-way through a
programme to do so, for which it received a further £300 million
in the 2025 Spending Review to invest between 2026-27 and
2028-29.
To address the issues raised in the
recent reviews, Defra needs to
balance ‘quick win' recommendations that are
easier to implement with the more structural changes that will
take longer but have greatest potential for
impact.
The NAO report recommends
that upon embarking on their period of potentially
significant reform, Defra and the
regulators should take a focused and integrated
approach to the changes needed. The recommendations
include:
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Setting a plan for how existing
change programmes and new reforms – including digital change –
will link together, so they are planned and delivered in a
coherent way
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More effectively
using information to target limited resources on the areas
where there is greatest risk to the
environment
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Defining risk appetite to
support a culture of change and
innovation.
, head of the NAO,
said:
“The government intends for the
regulatory system to both protect the environment and enable
economic growth, but it is not working as effectively as it
could. The current system is complex and outdated.
“Defra and the regulators are
working to improve how they regulate, including in response to
recent major reviews. Success will depend on taking a
sufficiently strategic approach and sticking to the course set.”
ENDS
Notes to editors
1. Delivering economic growth and
nature recovery: An independent review of Defra's regulatory
landscape, Dan Corry
Independent Water Commission: review
of the water sector, Sir
Optimising Delivery Review, Heather
Hancock (unpublished)