Ben Stansfield
Partner
Article
16
The UK Government has published its updated Environmental Improvement Plan (EIP), outlining the steps it intends to take in order to improve the natural environment and setting interim targets to keep the UK on track to meet its long-term statutory targets. The EIP sets out 10 headline goals and makes 91 commitments, giving businesses, communities and policymakers a clear roadmap for environmental action and investment over the next five years.
In this article, we provide an overview of what the updated EIP covers, some of the implications for key stakeholders across different sectors and consider how this might steer future environmental legislation and business compliance.
Publication of the updated 2025 EIP is particularly timely, as it arrived in the same week that the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC), the only statutory nature advisor for the entire UK, published its annual UK Biodiversity Indicators report. The JNCC concluded that overall, more indicators of biodiversity are deteriorating or showing no change than are improving, both in the long and short term. The JNCC did note that while there are many signs of positive change in some aspects of biodiversity, ongoing pressures on ecosystems remain significant.
For organisations across a wide range of sectors, the updated EIP represents a challenge to meet higher expectations and an opportunity to innovate, build resilience and contribute to long-term environmental recovery.
The EIP is the Government’s statutory strategy for improving the natural environment under the Environment Act 2021. First published in 2023 as the initial revision to the 25‑Year Environment Plan (originally launched in 2018), the EIP provided a long‑term framework for nature recovery, resource efficiency and resilience. The 2025 update builds on that foundation, developing the commitments introduced in 2023 and setting new priorities across climate, circular economy and environmental security.
In this summary, we have grouped together some of the key themes from the 2025 plan and highlighted several key headlines under each, giving insight into what they could mean for businesses. For background on the 2023 plan and its role as the first revision to the 25‑Year Environment Plan, you can read our earlier insight..
Restoration of nature is a central ambition of the EIP 2025, with the overarching aim of creating a network of bigger, better and more resilient habitats, through conservation and land management, reversing biodiversity loss, increasing woodland cover and hedgerow planting and halting the decline in species abundance.
Goal 1: Restored nature – We will create a network of bigger, better and more resilient habitats to help nature thrive.
The EIP 2025 outlines an ambition to reverse biodiversity loss and expand opportunities for people to connect with nature. It combines conservation and land management with measures to increase woodland cover, restore hedgerows and halt the decline in species abundance. Alongside restoration, the plan emphasises access, recognising the public health benefits of greener, more biodiverse environments. The Nature Restoration Fund and commitments on hedgerow habitats illustrate the scale of that ambition.
While the EIP addresses a number of areas under this theme, here we highlight four commitments, in particular, under the goal of restored nature:
The commitments on nature recovery and access will shape how organisations manage land, plan developments and assess supply chains. Large landowners will need to understand how their holdings contribute to wider conservation goals, including whether they provide nature corridors or sit close to protected landscapes. Developers and infrastructure providers will be expected to deliver biodiversity net gain (BNG) and factor habitat creation into planning decisions – particularly as designations under planning law may evolve as actions from the EIP are implemented.
The plan also places responsibilities on landowners and managers, who will be supported to restore tens of thousands of kilometres of hedgerows and contribute to the target of conserving 30% of UK land by 2030. The impact will see supply chains across sectors come under greater scrutiny, with large infrastructure developers and other organisations needing to understand how their activities affect habitats and biodiversity - not only directly but also through their suppliers.
The EIP indicates that businesses should look down their supply chains to identify risks and opportunities, ensuring that procurement and project delivery align with conservation and access goals. The Nature Restoration Fund, which will be established under the Planning & Infrastructure Act to ensure developments support recovery of protected sites and species, and commitments made on woodland and habitat expansion highlight opportunities for investment in forestry and land management. They also signal, however, that compliance and reporting will be looked at even more closely.
As discussed in the sections above under each of the five major themes of the EIP, a range of industries will be impacted and also benefit from some of the changes being put in place. Most notably:
It’s important for organisations to start considering what the actions in the EIP will mean for them at this early stage and to seek advice where needed. In some cases, putting steps into place that are currently voluntary, but will become mandatory in the short-to-medium term, will help those adapting to the new landscape.
The UK's EIP 2025 marks an important shift in environmental regulation, with binding targets that will reshape business practice. Stricter limits on air and water use, tougher pollution controls and mandatory biodiversity recovery milestones will drive operational change across sectors. Circular economy measures and phased restrictions on persistent chemicals such as PFAS will require early planning, while climate resilience is set to become a statutory requirement in both planning approvals and corporate reporting. These obligations present challenges, but businesses that move first will be better placed to manage risk, secure investment and demonstrate leadership in sustainability.
The UK's EIP will continue to evolve through new guidance and legislation, with direct impacts on business compliance and opportunity. We are monitoring developments closely and sharing ESG updates to help organisations stay ahead. Sign up to receive our future ESG updates and insights or contact Ben Stansfield or Emma Cartledge-Taylor to discuss how these changes may affect your organisation.
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