Retrospective works on land near a south Pembrokeshire quarry which overlooks historic Carew Castle, made after an enforcement warning was served, have been approved by the National Park.

An application before the June 5 meeting of Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority’s development management committee by A and C Aggregates for re-profiling works on land to the south of Carew Quarry, Carew Newton to include two temporary monitoring boreholes was recommended for delegated approval.

A report for planners said the application has been made after an Enforcement Warning Notice was served at the site, near to scheduled ancient monument and Grade-I-listed Carew Castle, run by the National Park, and the historic tidal mill and bridge.

A concurrent application in relation to re-profiling of the southern face of Carew Quarry and associated landscaping works has been made in relation to quarry operations at the north of the site, but has not yet been determined by the Park.

The report said: “The authority received reports of unauthorised engineering works on the site in October 2023. This led to a site visit and the issuing of a Planning Contravention Notice.

“Following on from this, officers advised the applicant that the re-profiling works were unauthorised and would require planning permission.

“The re-profiling works were halted at that point due to concerns that there might be archaeological or historical assets within the ground. A formal Enforcement Warning Notice was issued by the Authority on March 14.”

“This application seeks retrospective planning permission for re-profiling works undertaken. This area of agricultural land lies immediately to the south of land used as an informal (28-day rule) cricket ground and has required low-scale re-profiling works for agricultural improvements.”

Members of the committee backed a recommendation that the application be delegated for officer approval subject to receipt of a formal response from Natural Resources Wales in relation to a Habitats Regulations Assessment and subject to the conditions.

An Enforcement Warning Notice is used “to provide a clear signal to the developer that, if a retrospective planning application is submitted, adequate control could be applied to the development to make it acceptable”.