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Legally binding pollution targets outlined in Environment Bill

The government will today lay out its plans to cut air pollution and provide a new regulator to enforce long-term targets when it presents its new Environment Bill.

It will enshrine environmental principles in law and set out a framework for improvements to air and water quality, as well as measure to cut plastic pollution.

And there will be details of a new watchdog - the Office of Environmental Protection, which will be based in Bristol. It will have the power to scrutinise laws, investigate complaints and take enforcement action against public authorities to uphold standards.

The regulator's powers will cover climate change legislation and hold the Government to account on the legal commitment to cut greenhouse gases to net zero by 2050, working alongside the existing advisory Committee on Climate Change.

The main aims of the bill are:

While the Bill applies only to England, more than half of its measures - such as those designed to drive up recycling rates - are designed to apply across the UK.

Environment Secretary Theresa Villiers said: "Our natural environment is a vital shared resource and the need to act to secure it for generations to come is clear."

She said the Bill would lead a "green transformation that will help our country to thrive", and would position the UK as a world leader on improving air quality, nature and managing water resources in a changing climate.

"Crucially, it also ensures that after Brexit, environmental ambition and accountability are placed more clearly than ever before at the heart of government, both now and in the future," she added.

Welcoming the proposals on air pollution Dr Penny Woods, chief executive of the British Lung Foundation said: "We've been breathing dirty air for far too long in the UK, so it's critical that clear deadlines are set, to protect all our health as quickly as possible."

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Joan Edwards, director of public affairs at The Wildlife Trusts, said: "Nature and the wild places it depends on are in crisis - on land and at sea - and people are crying out for decisive action.

"It is vital that this Bill kickstarts a major recovery of natural habitats and provides more space for nature to fightback - before it's too late."

Although the bill is being presented today it is unlikely to make progress in the near future with a general election expected to be called in the coming weeks or months.