London Mayor Slaps Toxicity Charge on Polluting Cars

London traffic
Traffic in London's central borough of Westminster, Jan. 25, 2017 (Photo by David Holt)

 

LONDON, UK, February 22, 2017 (ENS) – Come October 23, London Mayor Sadiq Khan will impose a £10 (US$12.45) Toxicity-Charge on vehicles in central London that do not meet Euro 4 standards, typically those diesel and petrol vehicles registered before 2006.

The toughest emission standard of any city in the world, the T-Charge, also known as the Emissions Surcharge, will apply every weekday on an estimated 10,000 of the oldest, most polluting vehicles.

London traffic
Traffic in London’s central borough of Westminster, Jan. 25, 2016 (Photo by David Holt)

The T-charge will operate on top of, and during the same operating times, as the congestion charge – Monday to Friday 7am-6pm.

So, it will cost £21.50 (US$26.75) a day to drive a pre-Euro 4 vehicle in central London after October 23.

Air pollution in London is a public health crisis and the mayor says he has been forced to take hard-hitting action to tackle it.

Mayor Khan said, “It’s staggering that we live in a city where the air is so toxic that many of our children are growing up with lung problems. If we don’t make drastic changes now we won’t be protecting the health of our families in the future.”

“That is why today, on the 14th anniversary of the start of the congestion charge, I’ve confirmed we are pressing ahead with the toughest emission standard of any major city, coming to our streets from October 23rd.”

Khan
London Mayor Sadiq Khan at the World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 19, 2017 (Photo by Statsministerens kontor)

Currently over 9,000 Londoners die prematurely each year as a result of long-term exposure to air pollution, while 438 schools in the capital are in areas exceeding legal air quality levels.

“Londoners overwhelmingly support my plans to introduce this £10 charge because they feel when it comes to battling pollution the time for action is now,” said the mayor.

To help motorists get ready for the new charge, on Friday the mayor launched a free online vehicle checker on the Transport for London website so that drivers can check whether their vehicles will be affected.

Leon Daniels, Transport for London’s managing director of surface transport, said, “London’s air quality crisis is one of the biggest challenges we face, and we are working alongside the mayor to address it. The T-Charge is a crucial part of this work and will discourage drivers of the oldest, most polluting vehicles from driving in central London.”

“To help drivers we have created an online compliance checker, which can be found on the TfL website, that enables people to easily establish whether they will be affected by the charge and get advice on what action, if any, they need to take,” said Daniels.

To view the new compliance vehicle checker visit www.tfl.gov.uk/emissions-surcharge.

The T-Charge will use a camera-based mechanism for enforcement, monitoring both diesel and petrol vehicles, and is just one of the wide range of measures the mayor is introducing to improve air quality.

The mayor has doubled funding spent on improving air quality to £875 million over the next five years and will be consulting on introducing the central London Ultra Low Emission Zone in two years.

“The T-Charge is a vital step in tackling the dirtiest diesels before I introduce the world’s first Ultra Low Emission Zone as early as 2019,” said Mayor Khan.

He plans to expand the ULEZ to the North/South Circular roads and making it London-wide for heavy vehicles as early as 2019.

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London Mayor Sadiq Khan on a zero emission bus at the International Zero Emission Bus Conference, London, UK, Dec. 1, 2016 (Photo courtesy Office of the Mayor)

Mayor Khan also is spending more than £300 million transforming London’s bus fleet by phasing out pure double-deck diesel buses; he has committed to purchase only hybrid or zero-emission double-decker buses from 2018.

Chair of London Councils Transport and Environment Committee, Councillor Julian Bell, said, “London Councils welcomes positive action being taken by the mayor to address environmental issues and the introduction of this charge will play a key role in cutting the dangerous level of emissions in our city.”

A broad cross-section of London influencers support the mayor’s moves.

Steven Medway, managing director of Trading Environment, New West End Company said, “We are extremely supportive of any measures that accelerate a shift towards electric vehicles and help price dirty vehicles off our street. We have long championed initiatives such as these, and alongside Cross River Partnership and Arup have launched a business-led air quality strategy for the West End which last year helped reduce the number of waste vehicles on Bond Street by 94 percent.”

“This emissions surcharge is an important step towards the introduction of the Ultra-Low Emission Zone which will help tackle the issue of air quality head on,” he said.

Chief Executive of Living Streets, Joe Irvin, says the T-charge will get people out of their cars and walking. “Encouraging Londoners to take to their feet will not only relieve pressure on our transport system but will ensure people living and working in the city can breathe better air and enjoy better health,” he said.

Dr. Samantha Walker, director of research and policy at Asthma UK, said, “Two thirds of people with asthma tell us that air pollution makes their symptoms worse, putting them at an increased risk of a potentially life-threatening asthma attack. It’s vital that action is taken to address this, so we welcome the mayor’s plans to improve air quality in London.”

pollution
Pollution hangs in the air over London’s River Thames. (Photo courtesy Office of the Mayor)

Areeba Hamid, Greenpeace clean air campaigner, said, “This charge is an essential first step in reducing harmful air pollution in London. Air pollution can help to cause and worsen life threatening conditions like heart disease and asthma; and ultimately that’s shortening people’s lives.”

Dr. Penny Woods, chief executive of the British Lung Foundation, supports the T-charge, saying, “Places like Oxford Street regularly break pollution World Health Organization and EU limits on air that is safe for us to breathe. We’ve heard from people living with lung disease that the pollution levels are so high parts of the city have become a no-go zone.”

Sophie Neuburg, Friends of the Earth London campaigner said, “We know that road traffic is the biggest problem for air pollution, and diesels are the worst of all. The new T-charge is an important first step in reducing the toxic diesel fumes that are choking our city and harming the health of Londoners every day.”

London
London air pollution viewed from Hackney, April 10, 2015 (Photo by David Holt)

The mayor wants to work with the national government to help tackle dangerous air pollution. He is urging government actions that include setting up a diesel scrappage fund and producing a 21st century Clean Air Act.

A national dirty diesel scrappage fund would financially compensate motorists and enable government to tackle killer toxic air.

Proposals include £3,500 for up to 70,000 polluting London van and minibus drivers to buy cleaner vehicles. There’s a proposal for a £2,000 credit to help low-income London families scrap up to 130,000 cars and £1,000 to help scrap London’s oldest taxis.

The 21st century Clean Air Act would provide a legally enforceable right to clean air. Standards currently enforced by the European Union and the UK government could introduce new powers to better regulate all sources of emissions, not just road transport, and give powers to local authorities.

Mayor Khan says London needs additional powers to manage toxic emissions such as pollution from construction sites and river traffic and, he adds, increased funding is essential.

There must be greater funding for City Hall and boroughs to clean up the air, the mayor says. The current £3 million which comes from Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs’s air quality grants program is supposed to support measures across the UK and is “woefully insufficient given the scale of the challenge.”

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2017. All rights reserved.

 

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