Structural reform of the UK鈥檚 infrastructure is 鈥渙nly half the battle鈥, according to British Property Federation (BPF) chief executive Liz Peace.

The government鈥檚 National Infrastructure Plan was published today, with reforms to the UK planning process welcomed by the BPF.

Proposals include reform of compulsory purchase orders in the country鈥檚 2015 Budget to make processes 鈥渃learer, faster and fairer鈥, with the aim of bringing forward more brownfield land for development.

The government will also take steps to speed up the UK鈥檚 section 106 negotiations, to reduce delays to the planning process.

The plan was published alongside a refreshed infrastructure pipeline that provided details of more than 拢460bn of planned investment across both the public and private sectors.

Upstream oil and gas investments were included in the pipeline for the first time.

The BPF said a funding gap remained in UK  and urged the government to match structural reform of the planning system with measures to unlock greater investment in infrastructure.

The federation said the moves would ensure local authority planning departments were 鈥減roperly resourced鈥.

Peace said: 鈥淲e would urge the government to also ensure the system is properly resourced at a local level, and to do all it can to drive greater investment into the built environment as a whole.鈥

The plan also outlines efforts to bring brownfield land back into use and make it easier for UK councils to assemble land for regeneration.

鈥淒elivering the right infrastructure at a local, regional and national level is essential,鈥 Peace added.

鈥淭oday鈥檚 announcement marks a welcome step in ensuring the planning system works more effectively in bringing forward essential development and creating the conditions for growth.鈥