The ‘A double win’ insight, developed under Innovate UK’s Net Zero Living programme in partnership with Regen, focuses on the importance of considering clean power and biodiversity together, and outlines the key environmental challenges and opportunities associated with specific clean energy technologies.
A double win: A guide to integrating clean energy with nature restoration

Local authorities across the UK face increasing pressure to deliver clean energy at speed while safeguarding and restoring nature. This report shows that these ambitions don’t need to compete. In fact, when clean energy and nature recovery are planned together, councils can unlock a ‘double win’ by accelerating decarbonisation and improving local ecological and environmental health.
As the UK scales up solar, wind, storage, and grid infrastructure, councils will be presented with more complexities, but also more opportunities, to shape developments that deliver wider local benefits. National policy is shifting in this direction, with Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG), Local Nature Recovery Strategies (LNRS), and the forthcoming Land Use Framework all encouraging a more strategic, nature-positive approach. But delivery ultimately depends on local planning authorities having the confidence, capacity, and skills to act.
This analysis explains how well-designed clean energy projects can actively enhance nature. Solar farms managed for mixed habitats can support higher species richness than agricultural land. Onshore wind developments can be planned in partnership with local ecologists to restore carbon-rich habitats rather than damage them. Grid infrastructure and battery storage sites can be integrated with wildflower meadows, tree planting, and sustainable drainage systems.
If local authorities can bring these strands together through planning and procurement, then they will be better equipped to address community concerns about landscape change. And by recognising the overlap between climate and nature priorities, and by embedding these considerations early into projects, councils can accelerate Net Zero delivery in ways that strengthen public trust and improve local environments.