Environmental law is a teacher

Prosperous societies and economies depend on thriving and resilient ecosystems. Join Mott MacDonald and leading experts for a new podcast series, Nature Positive: The Inside Story, on the role of nature in infrastructure with leading insights on emerging best practice, career paths and lasting benefits for people and planet. 

Nature positive - the inside story

How does the law help guide better practice when it comes to nature positive action?

Richard Broadbent, a director at Freeths, is an expert in environmental law. With our host, Julia Baker, he explores how the legal and regulatory frameworks are helping to improve outcomes for nature and our shared environment. He explores how law can act as a teacher, institutionalising our collective obligations to better stewardship of our environment and the outcomes we want to value. They also look at the emerging practice and requirements involved in creating and operating habitat banks successfully.

Watch the episode

Listen to the episode

About our guests

Richard Broadbent is a director at Freeths LLP, specialising in environmental law. He was formerly a solicitor at Natural England, serving as its Head of Legal Services. Richard led on many of Natural England’s high-profile litigation and enforcement cases and provided advice to Natural England’s teams on the emergence of the Environment Act 2021 and Nature Green Paper. Richard is a highly distinguished environmental lawyer and has worked on a number of high-profile nationally significant infrastructure, planning, and species licencing cases. These include nuclear power stations, offshore windfarms, port developments and HS2. Richard trained at Collyer Bristow LLP in London and holds an LLM in Environmental Law from UCL.

Richard is listed as a Recommended Lawyer and recognised as a Next Generation Partner in The Legal 500 (2025 edition) in Environmental Law. He is also listed as a Leading Individual in Chambers & Partners (2025 edition).

Marketing consent