Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006

The Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006 (c 16), also referred to as the NERC Act (2006), is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006[1]
Long titleAn Act to make provision about bodies concerned with the natural environment and rural communities; to make provision in connection with wildlife, sites of special scientific interest, National Parks and the Broads; to amend the law relating to rights of way; to make provision as to the Inland Waterways Amenity Advisory Council; to provide for flexible administrative arrangements in connection with functions relating to the environment and rural affairs and certain other functions; and for connected purposes.
Citation2006 c 16
Dates
Royal assent30 March 2006
History of passage through Parliament
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended

Section 40 to 42 – Duty to conserve biodiversity

Section 40 of the NERC Act places a duty to conserve biodiversity on public authorities in England. It requires local authorities and government departments to have regard to the purposes of conserving biodiversity in a manner that is consistent with the exercise of their normal functions such as policy and decision-making. 'Conserving biodiversity' may include enhancing, restoring or protecting a population or a habitat[2]

Section 41 requires the Secretary of State to publish and maintain lists of species and types of habitats which are regarded by Natural England to be of "principal importance" for the purposes of conserving biodiversity in England. These 56 priority habitats and 943 species are drawn from earlier lists of United Kingdom Biodiversity Action Plan Priority Species and Habitats. The Section 41 lists are needed by decision-makers in local and regional authorities when carrying out their duties under Section 40 of the Act.[3]

Section 42 similarly required the National Assembly for Wales to publish equivalent lists of priority species and habitats for that country. However, this requirement (and one specified in Section 40 for Wales) has been superseded by virtue of similar requirements being enshrined in the Environment (Wales) Act 2016.[4]

Section 107 – Commencement

The following orders have been made under this section:

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gollark: If you drop the images and HTML formatting and whatever else most ebooks contain, and do compression better than ZIP does, you could probably reach some *ridiculous* compression ratios.
gollark: An average ebook is something like 1MB and that's for 100000 words + cover image.
gollark: If it's *anything* but "basically 100% of the day" you need batteries.
gollark: "1/3 of the day, when it isn't cloudy" is not most of the time.

See also

References

  1. The citation of this Act by this short title is authorised by section 109 of this Act.
  2. "Biodiversity duty: public authority duty to have regard to conserving biodiversity". www.gov.uk. UK Government. 13 October 2014. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  3. "Primary Legislation: England". Biodiversity Planning Toolkit. Association of Local Government Ecologists (ALGE). Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  4. "Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006: 42 Biodiversity lists and action (Wales)". www.legislation.gov.uk. UK Government. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
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