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Norfolk housebuilding plan doubts over climate targets

Construction stock image - Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto Ambitious new climate change targets from the UK government have cast doubt on plans to build 50,000 homes in Norfolk.   On Tuesday the government unveiled plans to toughen targets on greenhouse gas emissions, with carbon dioxide to be cut by 78pc by 2035 compared to 1990 levels.   Michael Rayner of the countryside charity Campaign to Protect Rural England Norfolk (CPRE) has argued the emissions targets would not fit in with the Greater Norwich Local Plan (GNLP).   The GNLP is a blueprint for where tens of thousands of homes could be built in Norwich, Broadland and South Norfolk over the next two decades, with a focus on building in and around the city and along the A11.  

GNLP housebuilding plan doubts over climate targets

Construction stock image - Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto Ambitious new climate change targets from the UK government have cast doubt on plans to build 50,000 homes in Norfolk.   On Tuesday the government unveiled plans to toughen targets on greenhouse gas emissions, with carbon dioxide to be cut by 78pc by 2035 compared to 1990 levels.   Michael Rayner of the countryside charity Campaign to Protect Rural England Norfolk (CPRE) has argued the emissions targets would not fit in with the Greater Norwich Local Plan (GNLP).   The GNLP is a blueprint for where tens of thousands of homes could be built in Norwich, Broadland and South Norfolk over the next two decades, with a focus on building in and around the city and along the A11.  

Taller mobile phone masts for the Norfolk countryside

Published: 5:54 PM April 20, 2021    Taller mobile phone masts could be allowed if the government relaxes current planning restrictions. Picture: Antony Kelly - Credit: Evening News © 2007 Mobile phone masts up to 20pc taller than the current models could get approved in the Norfolk countryside, under new government plans announced today.   The move is an effort to tackle mobile blind spots in rural communities and boost the rollout of 5G networks.   However, areas like the Broads and areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) like the Norfolk coast will have stricter rules.   Masts will be allowed a maximum height of 30 metres in unprotected areas and 25 in protected areas and Telecom firms will be allowed to make existing masts up to five metres taller and two metres wider without prior approval.  

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