A woman has begun a legal bid to prevent her dead husband's frozen sperm from being destroyed.
Beth Warren, 28, has been told by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) that the sperm cannot be stored beyond April 2015.
Her husband, Warren Brewer, a ski instructor, died of a brain tumour at the age of 32 in February 2012.
His sperm was stored before treatment, and he made it clear his wife should be allowed to use it posthumously.
The couple, who were together for eight years, married in a hospice six weeks before his death. She subsequently changed her surname to Warren.
"I understand that it's a huge decision to have a child who will never meet their father, " said Mrs Warren, who lives in Birmingham.
"I cannot make that choice now and need more time to build my life back. I may never go ahead with treatment but I want to have the freedom to decide once I am no longer grieving.
"My brother died in a car accident just week before my husband's death, so there has been a huge amount to cope with."
Mrs Warren was initially told that her husband's last consent form lapsed in April 2013, but has subsequently been granted two brief extensions amounting to two years. The frozen sperm is stored at the CARE fertility clinic in Northampton.
Her lawyer, James Lawford Davies said the 2009 regulations created injustice.