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Rachel Reeves set to scrap European environmental rules to boost building projects

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is considering allowing only one opportunity to bring any challenge to environmental protections and has been encouraged to go further by some MPs

(Image: Getty Images)

Rachel Reeves is poised to wield the axe against environmental safeguards that obstruct infrastructure schemes in an effort to bolster Labour's construction commitments.

The Chancellor is weighing up reforms to stop nature considerations from hampering fresh developments as she frantically seeks to turbocharge her growth strategy, as reported by .

Labour's Planning and Infrastructure bill is currently at committee stage in the House of Lords, but the Treasury is reportedly already preparing for another bill to dismantle sections of European environmental regulations.

Reeves has instructed officials to examine more controversial reforms, according to The Times, following exasperation that the interests of "bats and newts" were throttling infrastructure aspirations.

The Chancellor is contemplating permitting just one chance to mount any challenge, whilst some MPs and peers have urged her to advance further by employing parliamentary acts to block legal challenges to specific named schemes.

During a hearing at the House of Lords' economic affairs committee last month, Reeves restated ambitions to accelerate the government's planning bill. She informed peers: "I care more about the young family getting on the housing ladder than I do about protecting some snails."

(Image: Getty Images)

Reeves to trigger more internal backlash

Treasury moves to demolish environmental protections would likely provoke additional backlash from rebel Labour MPs. The government has already encountered strong criticism from its own backbenchers over its stance on the winter fuel payment, two-child benefit cap and proposed welfare reforms.

Nevertheless, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has expressed similar exasperation to the Chancellor regarding stalled projects. Starmer vowed at the beginning of the year to bypass "the whims of nimbys" by restricting legal challenges against major schemes.