Government largely accepts recommendations in OEP’s EIP progress report


Defra has published its official response to the OEP's progress report on the Environmental Improvement Plan (EIP) (2024-2025).  

The Defra statement can be found here.  

In response Professor Robbie McDonald, OEP Chief Scientist, said: “We welcome government’s response, that largely accepts our recommendations.  We will take time to consider it in detail as we finalise our next progress report, which will be published in mid-January (2027).

“Our most recent progress assessment, published in January (2026), to which this is government’s formal response, was that government remains largely off track to meet its environmental targets and obligations, including legally binding biodiversity targets set under the Environment Act and the UK’s twin 30by30 commitments both for protected areas and for restoring degraded ecosystems.  

“That is why what happens now matters, as government must make the choice whether or not it is going to meet those targets.”

Government also published its Annual Progress Report (APR) that provides its assessment of how it is doing in delivering the EIP and Environment Act 2021 targets from April 2025 to March 2026.  

Responding to the APR Professor McDonald added: “We recognise that Defra has made improvements to its APR, in line with the revised EIP25.

“The new approach is more systematic and comprehensive. It also brings increased transparency in some places, which is welcome and should go further. Transparency is important so that it is clear to all whether the actions being taken will suffice to meet targets, such as halting the decline of biodiversity by 2030.

“There are still some areas that can be improved, such as the actions government has broadly defined as ‘in progress’, which we will look at closely as we prepare our next independent EIP assessment. In that, we will examine what is defined as ‘in progress’, as this covers a very wide range from preparatory activities through to full roll-out of large schemes, and what this means for delivery.”