Changes to law limiting new building on farmland in france

Changes to law limiting new building on farmland in france

Play all audios:

Loading...

THE ORIGINAL PLAN BY THE ECOLOGY MINISTRY WOULD HAVE HALVED THE AMOUNT OF BUILDING ON FRENCH FARMLAND IN A DECADE A proposed law to slow the rate of building on farms and other land not


previously built on has been changed. Builders feared the original plan by the ecology ministry would have lead to a rapid escalation of the price of land over the next 10 years. The EU has


agreed a target for all member states to stop such building by 2050. François Rieussec, president of planners’ union the Union Nationale des Aménageurs, told _The Connexion_: “If things had


gone along as originally planned, there would have been a price bubble on land in France which could be built on. “Also, a switch from building houses with gardens, which is what French


people want, to more expensive and less popular flats. “Luckily, parliamentarians saw this and changed things so that the goal is still there, but the operational details have time to be


worked out. “We propose that it is up to local communes to decide, and the best way of doing so is to make biodiversity a part of the building permit application – so that trees and planting


and things like urban farms are considered with applications.” In a note published last summer, the environment ministry said it had set up a special unit to report on the transformation of


farmland, woods and natural land into built-on land. RELATED STORIES Meet the organic goat farmers at ‘La Chèvrerie de la Peytavigne’ 'Kafkaesque' row over 22 illegal wind


turbines in south France