Keir Starmer, No Downing Street, c Kirsty O'Connor, No Downing Street

Prime Minister Keir Starmer launched his Plan for Change on 5 December. Credit: Kirsty O'Connor, No 10 Downing Street

Starmer’s Plan for Change doubles down on 1.5m housing goal

“What is the point of setting a target that you can deliver without bold action?” Prime Minister Keir Starmer told an audience at Pinewood Studios on Thursday after recommitting to his pre-election promise to build 1.5m homes.

Starmer’s speech came as his government released its Plan for Change, a series of “missions” it will aim to achieve by 2030.

Most of these will be familiar to readers of the Labour Party’s manifesto and post-election speeches.

The plan includes building 1.5m homes in England, publishing a new National Planning Policy Framework before the end of the year, fast-tracking planning decisions on 150 major infrastructure schemes, and having the country run on 95% clean energy. The Budget promise to bolster the Affordable Homes Programme by £500m got a mention.

There is a little more detail regarding timeframes for some initiatives. A 10-year strategy for housing and infrastructure delivery will come out next spring. These will include, in the words of the government, “clear priorities, plans to deliver, and a pipeline of projects for investors and supply chains”.

Building upon the NPPF’s pre-year-end release, the government promised to update all relevant national policy statements by next summer.

A “forthcoming” Clean Power 2030 Action Plan will detail reforms for the planning system in regards to infrastructure as well as “building the grid”.

In more vague terms, the Plan for Change includes a promise to modernise planning committees and increase capacity at a local planning department level.

Such planning reform will be critical to getting even close to the 1.5m homes target. Data from Centre for Cities shows that Whitehall will fall 388,000 homes short of its goal is no changes to the planning system are made.

Starmer said he was aware of the naysayers. He told the crowd Thursday that he knew cynics would declare his goals unachievable, but he was not bothered.

He said: “You choose change, not because it’s easy but because it’s hard.”

Your Comments

Read our comments policy

Where are all the trades coming from to build all these houses? there is a shortage as it is

By Jon P

Not a chance. Pure political fantasy, this. The supply-side constraints, never mind the inertia built into the planning system itself, mean this will never happen. Starmer’s not even talking a good game any more: he’s just on repeat. That’s quite some going, only five months into the job.

By More Anonymous than the others

@December 06, 2024 at 8:42 am
By Jon P

Good point. Politicians can set all the targets they want but if there’s not the skills, then they won’t hit them. Time to train up lots of apprentices.

By Rye

Work skills training is more important that academic schooling and universities. It should be out of school into work-skills training like in Germany. Apprentice-Fellow-Master with recognized professions/trades, not UK-style on-the-job-training chaos.

By Anonymous

No chance! There isn’t the spa city in the construction section and Brexit doesn’t thanks to the lack of Polish plumbers etc.
Converting NPPF into updated local plans will take far too long, to implement, let alone secure planning consent. Over promising and will under deliver. One term govt!

By Grumpy Old Git

Planning depts down to the bare bones and WFH. Lucky to get a response within 12 months.

By Anonymous

Related Articles

Sign up to receive the Place Daily Briefing

Join more than 13,000 property professionals and receive your free daily round-up of built environment news direct to your inbox

Subscribe

Join more than 13,000 property professionals and sign up to receive your free daily round-up of built environment news direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you are agreeing to our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

"*" indicates required fields

Your Job Field*
Other regional Publications - select below