It has taken just eight days for London to exceed its air
pollution limits for the entire year, according to a monitoring and researchgroup.
European air-quality rules say levels of hourly nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) are not to breach the maximum limit for more than 18 hours per
year. However Putney High Street became the first place in London to reach its
19th hour of exceeding the limit during Friday morning’s rush hour, according
to the King’s College organization London Air Quality Network. In 2015, Oxford
Street breached its limits for the year in just two days. It would most likely
have been first to break the legal objectives for this year too, if the
monitoring equipment wasn’t currently being repaired. The breach comes just
weeks after the government announced its plan to purify the UK’s air. After
violating the EU NO2 limits five years in a row, the UK was ordered by the
supreme court to publish an action plan to tackle the problem. A government
plan was published in December 2015.
High levels of the toxic gas are emitted from diesel exhaust
fumes, a recent study found that exposure to the fumes can significantly impact
people with asthma. Researchers at Imperial College London found that both
during and after a two hour walk along Oxford Street, volunteers experience
increased asthmatic symptoms like reduced lung capacity and inflammation in the
lungs. After a few hours the symptoms did return to their normal levels,
however these harmful gases are blamed for nearly 9,500 premature deaths in
London annually.
In general, vehicle exhausts are only responsible for a
third of traffic pollution, according to a study published in Atmospheric Environment.
The study goes on to say that of that traffic pollution, nearly half of it
comes from “non-exhaust sources like brake wear, road-surface wear and
particles whipped up from the road by passing vehicles”.
“As exhaust regulations become stricter, non-exhaust sources
become proportionately more important. Continuing to control exhaust emissions
alone may not be enough to achieve legal air-quality standards”, said Professor
Ranjeet Sokhi, of the University of Hertfordshire, who led the study.
Private passenger cars were made exempt from the plan which
means UK cities including London, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Cardiff and
Edinburgh will breach EU air pollution limits for the the next five years at
least. Under the new plan, the government aims to declare Birmingham, Leeds,
Nottingham, Derby and Southampton ‘clean air zones’ by 2020. As such, owners of
older, less economic, buses, coaches, taxis and trucks will have to pay a fee
to enter. However, privately-owned passenger vehicles – which make up 88
percent of the UK’s motor fleet -will not have to pay the charge.
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