11/9/2025

Changes to the heather and grass burning regulations – will this “Plan for Change” deliver?

By Henrietta Appleton, Policy Officer (England)

Defra has announced that it will proceed with the planned changes to the Heather & Grass Burning Regulations 2021 which it consulted on in the Spring/early Summer.  This means that the requirement for a licence to burn on deep peat will be extended to Less Favoured Areas, and deep peat will be redefined as more than 30cms.  According to Defra’s own statistics this will extend the area covered by the new rules to over 676,000 ha, more than trebling the area currently covered by the regulations.

But will this deliver?  One of the points we made in our online response is that no evidence was presented in the consultation to show that the 2021 regulations were having a net benefit to peatland health and ecosystem service provision.  Surely it is important that decisions such as this are driven by evidence; and in this regard it is interesting to note that there is no acknowledgement of the number of academics/research institutions that responded to the consultation.  Obviously, there is the NE evidence review that accompanied the announcement of the consultation, but this focussed on the effects of managed burning. It did not consider the impact of not burning or cutting on risks such as wildfire, which is the subject of a NERC funded project still to report.  

We remain concerned that these further restrictions to vegetation management will not deliver ambitions on nature recovery nor net zero as intended.  In particular they will place our precious peatlands at greater risk of extreme wildfire events given climate change predictions such as witnessed in the Goyt and on Langdale.  In the worst year ever for wildfires it seems incongruous that government policy could be putting more of our precious peatlands at risk, not less.

We also have issue with the statement that air quality will be improved.  It appears to us that Defra and others are conflating the effects of wildfire with managed burning.  The impact of wildfires on air quality is a global phenomenon with far reaching impacts Wildfires producing 'witches' brew' of air pollution: UN. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) recognises wildfire as an emergent threat to public health given the toxic pollutants emitted, including PM2.5 which is associated with premature deaths. The 2018 Saddleworth Moor wildfire resulted in PM2.5 concentrations twice the World Health Organisation’s recommended limit, affected up to c4.5 million people and caused a 165% increase in excess mortality - that is c3.5 extra deaths per day (UKHSA).

On a positive note, Defra acknowledges that restoring peatland through rewetting can take time and that during the transition pre-emptive action through creating firebreaks may still be needed – including through burning – and we welcome the new research ground for a licence application. 

But this means that the focus will be on the licensing process which they have acknowledged needs improvement.  It wasn’t working for land managers or Defra.  The new guidance and online form will be on the website by 30th September, so we look forward to seeing the revisions and updates that hopefully reduce the complexity that currently surrounds an application and the consenting process.  But we are concerned that these licences will only be granted “in very limited circumstances” relegating burning to a last resort.

In conclusion, these changes are disappointing as they ignore the scientific evidence of wildfire risk and the experiential evidence that is the reality of the 2025 wildfire season and instead are seemingly based on a long running campaign to bring heather burning to an end.

Comments

Need for removing fire loading on moorlands

at 22:24 on 16/09/2025 by Gary Jefferson

As a retired firefighter and wildfire specialist controlled burning is crucial in reducing fire loading on moorland It allows fire crews areas to bring the fire under control It also ensures that when a fire starts you don’t loose all of your moorland Discussions with Natural England in fire groups needs to take place

Heather and moorland burning

at 18:21 on 16/09/2025 by John Dickson

The arguments presented don't take into account the collateral damage from moorland burning. For example, the adder has just had its conservation status elevated to vulnerable Heather and moorland is a core habitat for this species and burning as a management practice is devastating for them, particularly in the favoured burning period of late February/March. The cutting of firebreaks would be far more beneficial for this species and other more sedentary species with limited dispersal abilities.

New heather burning regs

at 18:11 on 16/09/2025 by Charles Mitchell

How stupid can the Govt get! What is the point of consultations if they are not taken notice of? The new regs present a huge additional fire risk to massive areas of precious moorland. Here in N Yorks we are just recovering from the Langdale fire which we could smell some 15 miles from the site and caused massive disruption and inconvenience to the locality from the resultant road closures. It shows the ignorance of the conservationists that we were told at the start of the fire that the heather was not burnt regularly for fear of endangering the merlin population.However, merlins are thriving on other well managed grouse moors in N Yorks where cool burn has been practised for many years!

Weekly News Letter

at 14:38 on 16/09/2025 by David Arthur Robson Hannam

defra/NE Heather burning/wildfire Ignorance is bliss!! Yours ever David

Heather + grass burning

at 14:37 on 16/09/2025 by Steven Orzechowski

In 1989 when the SSSI designation was awarded to moorland where I worked NE recognised that all the flora and fauna that was present for this to be recognised for the SSSI status was present because of the management practices carried out by generations of moorland owners and the gamekeepers that they employed and nothing to do with NE . Now that NE has basically taken over the management of all of the moorland that has been recognised as the UK equivalent of the Amozon rain forest it is being systematically destroyed by NE and it's denial that moorland needs rotational burning ! If NE are allowed to carry on in this way it will be the end of Heather clad moorland.

Heather and grass burning

at 14:20 on 16/09/2025 by Lyndon Roach

What the names of these faceless wonders making decisions about burning at Defra?

Controlled burning of heather

at 13:24 on 16/09/2025 by Roy Sanderson

The recent moorland fires have proved that the academics at DEFRA have no understanding of the countryside. For more than 100 years, owners and gamekeepers have done controlled burning. This kept fresh shoots of heather for wildlife and ensured that fire breaks existed to avoid the disastrous fires that have occurred over recent years. DEFRA's misguided approach to controlling heather has resulted in the horrendous loss of wildlife and habitat. It is time for DEFRA to accept their errors and get back to countrymen using COMMON SENSE.

Changes to the heather and grass burning regulations

at 12:15 on 16/09/2025 by William Gascoigne

Sadly it is inevitable that the people who make these decisions, despite being advised by others with practical knowledge, have absolutely no idea what they are talking about. Their decisions are largely based on dogma and ‘desk top’ research, having never actually been out in the field I their lives! It happens time and time again and when things go horribly wrong…it’s always someone else’s fault!!

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