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UK Loses 600 Football Pitches of Nature Daily to Development
2 Oct
Summary
- Developers build 600-home estate in protected AONB landscape
- UK committed to protect 30% of land and sea for nature by 2030
- Experts warn piecemeal development will erode AONB protections

In a concerning trend, the UK is currently losing the equivalent of 600 football pitches' worth of nature and farmland each day to development, according to a recent report. The construction of a 600-home estate within the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) in West Sussex has become a prime example of this alarming issue.
The Woodgate estate, built over the past three years, is the largest land grab of an AONB by developers in Britain during the 2018-2023 period. These protected natural landscapes, which have been renamed "national landscapes," are supposed to be among the country's most safeguarded areas. However, the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE) has warned that such piecemeal development is undermining the very protections that are meant to preserve these precious environments.
As the UK government has committed to protecting 30% of its land and sea for nature by 2030, the delicate balance between housing demands and environmental preservation has become a pressing concern. Experts caution that the Labour government's push for growth could put some of the UK's most cherished and protected lands at risk of destruction by housebuilding.
The battle to safeguard the country's natural landscapes is far from over, with another large development of 1,450 homes planned between the villages of Cuckfield and Ansty, also within the High Weald national landscape. Campaigners and environmental organizations continue to fight these encroachments, but the threat of losing the UK's most treasured natural areas remains a critical issue that policymakers must address.