Environmental surveyor inspecting a UK residential property before purchase

What is an Environmental Survey?

An environmental survey is a comprehensive assessment of potential environmental risks associated with a property or piece of land. For anyone buying commercial property, development land or even residential property on a former industrial site in the UK, an environmental survey is essential due diligence that can save you from inheriting costly contamination liabilities.

At Wesson Environmental, we conduct environmental surveys across Bristol and throughout the UK. Our surveys identify potential contamination, assess environmental risks and provide clear recommendations before you commit to a purchase.

Why Do Property Buyers Need an Environmental Survey?

When you purchase land or property in the UK, you can inherit environmental liabilities from previous owners. Under Part 2A of the Environmental Protection Act 1990, if contamination is discovered, the current landowner may be held responsible for remediation costs – even if the contamination occurred decades before you bought the property.

An environmental survey before purchase can:

  • Identify contamination risks that could cost thousands to remediate
  • Provide negotiating power to reduce the purchase price
  • Prevent deals falling through after exchange due to contamination discoveries
  • Ensure you meet lender requirements (many banks require environmental surveys for commercial property)
  • Give you peace of mind about the environmental condition of your investment

The cost of an environmental survey is minimal compared to the potential liability you could inherit. We have seen cases where buyers faced remediation bills exceeding £100,000 for contamination they knew nothing about when they purchased.

What Does an Environmental Survey Include?

A comprehensive environmental survey typically includes several components:

Historical Land Use Assessment

We review historical Ordnance Survey maps dating back to the 1800s to identify previous site uses. Former industrial activities, landfills, petrol stations, dry cleaners, engineering works and many other uses can leave contamination in soil and groundwater.

This historical review often reveals surprising information. A site that appears to be clean agricultural land may have been a brickworks, coal yard or chemical storage facility 80 years ago. These historical uses create contamination risks that persist for decades.

Environmental Database Search

We search environmental databases for records of:

  • Pollution incidents on or near the site
  • Landfills and waste sites within 250-500 metres
  • Fuel storage tanks and petrol stations
  • Industrial processes requiring environmental permits
  • Contaminated land register entries
  • Groundwater source protection zones

This data helps identify off-site sources of contamination that could affect your property, such as migrating landfill gas or groundwater plumes from nearby industrial sites.

Geological and Hydrogeological Assessment

Understanding the geology beneath your site is crucial for assessing contamination risks. We review:

  • Soil types and their permeability
  • Presence of aquifers and groundwater vulnerability
  • Depth to groundwater
  • Nearby surface water courses
  • Flood risk

Clay soils tend to contain contamination, whilst permeable sands and gravels allow contaminants to migrate more readily. Sites above principal aquifers face stricter regulatory scrutiny.

Site Walkover Survey

Our consultants visit the site to observe current conditions and look for visual evidence of contamination such as:

  • Staining or discolouration of soils
  • Unusual odours
  • Areas of stressed or dead vegetation
  • Made ground or evidence of infilling
  • Asbestos-containing materials
  • Storage of chemicals or fuels
  • Fly-tipping or waste deposits

The walkover also assesses surrounding land uses and identifies sensitive receptors like residential properties, schools or water courses that could be affected by contamination.

Conceptual Site Model and Risk Assessment

All the gathered information is synthesised into a conceptual site model (CSM) which identifies potential pollutant linkages. We assess whether there is a credible risk pathway between contamination sources and receptors (people, buildings, water resources).

This risk assessment determines whether further investigation is needed. For many sites, particularly those with low-risk historical uses, the environmental survey alone is sufficient to conclude that risks are negligible.

When is Further Investigation Required?

If the environmental survey identifies potential contamination risks, we may recommend a Phase 2 intrusive investigation. This involves soil sampling and testing to quantify contamination levels.

However, we never recommend intrusive work unless it is genuinely necessary. Many environmental surveys conclude that risks are low and no further action is required. We have a reputation for honest appraisals – we will not suggest expensive investigations if they are not warranted.

When intrusive investigation is needed, it should be carried out before you complete the property purchase. This allows you to:

  • Negotiate a price reduction to cover remediation costs
  • Request that the seller carries out remediation before completion
  • Walk away from the deal if contamination is too severe
  • Plan remediation into your development budget and timeline

Environmental Surveys for Different Property Types

Commercial and Industrial Property

Commercial property purchases almost always require an environmental survey, particularly for:

  • Former industrial sites
  • Retail properties with historical dry cleaning or fuel storage
  • Warehouses and distribution centres
  • Sites near railways or former gas works

Lenders typically require an environmental survey as part of their due diligence before approving commercial mortgages.

Development Land

If you are purchasing land for development, an environmental survey is essential. Planning authorities often impose contaminated land conditions on brownfield sites. Understanding contamination issues before purchase allows you to factor investigation and remediation costs into your development appraisal.

Our Phase 1 Desktop Study services are designed to meet planning condition requirements and provide the foundation for development projects.

Residential Property on Former Industrial Land

Even residential purchases may benefit from an environmental survey if the property is built on former industrial land. Whilst modern developments should have addressed contamination during construction, older conversions of industrial buildings may not have been properly assessed.

How Much Does an Environmental Survey Cost?

A Phase 1 environmental survey (desktop study and walkover) typically costs between £800 and £2,000 depending on site size and complexity. This is a small investment compared to the potential liabilities you could inherit.

For commercial property transactions worth hundreds of thousands or millions of pounds, the cost of an environmental survey is negligible – yet it can identify issues that fundamentally affect the value and viability of your purchase.

What Happens if Contamination is Found?

Discovering contamination during an environmental survey is not necessarily a deal-breaker. Many contaminated sites can be successfully developed with appropriate remediation.

Options include:

  • Negotiating a price reduction to cover remediation costs
  • Requesting that the seller remediates before completion
  • Planning remediation as part of your development works
  • In some cases, using contamination as grounds to withdraw from the purchase

Our team can advise on remediation options and costs to help you make informed decisions.

Choosing an Environmental Survey Provider

Not all environmental surveys are equal. A poor quality survey may miss important contamination risks or recommend unnecessary further work.

Look for consultants who:

  • Have experience working with UK regulators
  • Provide clear, jargon-free reports
  • Offer fixed-price quotes
  • Have professional indemnity insurance
  • Will liaise with your solicitor and lender
  • Provide honest recommendations without upselling unnecessary work

At Wesson Environmental, we have conducted environmental surveys on hundreds of sites across the UK, from small residential plots to multi-hectare industrial sites. Our reports are designed to be clear and actionable, giving you the information you need to make confident purchasing decisions.

Get Expert Advice Before You Buy

If you are considering purchasing property or land in Bristol or anywhere in the UK, contact Wesson Environmental for a free, no-obligation discussion about whether an environmental survey is appropriate for your transaction.

Our environmental surveys provide peace of mind and protect you from inheriting unexpected contamination liabilities. We work quickly to meet tight transaction timescales and provide clear, practical advice.

Call us on 0117 369 0156 or email enquiries@wessonenvironmental.co.uk to discuss your property purchase.