Dubai Telegraph - Clean streets vs business woes: pollution charge divides Londoners

EUR -
AED 4.176035
AFN 82.090648
ALL 98.572182
AMD 442.591394
ANG 2.049104
AOA 1036.893475
ARS 1335.347468
AUD 1.775367
AWG 2.049343
AZN 1.923479
BAM 1.952691
BBD 2.293927
BDT 138.038994
BGN 1.951406
BHD 0.428466
BIF 3335.795768
BMD 1.136945
BND 1.490014
BOB 7.8505
BRL 6.456326
BSD 1.136081
BTN 96.894867
BWP 15.553099
BYN 3.718147
BYR 22284.116243
BZD 2.282146
CAD 1.57547
CDF 3270.990029
CHF 0.942203
CLF 0.027768
CLP 1065.589546
CNY 8.284933
CNH 8.289839
COP 4839.973615
CRC 572.683112
CUC 1.136945
CUP 30.129035
CVE 110.08971
CZK 24.960459
DJF 202.057454
DKK 7.46723
DOP 67.422055
DZD 150.763073
EGP 57.938133
ERN 17.054171
ETB 151.409188
FJD 2.564266
FKP 0.85761
GBP 0.85322
GEL 3.115913
GGP 0.85761
GHS 17.212593
GIP 0.85761
GMD 81.29273
GNF 9838.248573
GTQ 8.749991
GYD 237.699434
HKD 8.821389
HNL 29.453843
HRK 7.532027
HTG 148.432354
HUF 406.525378
IDR 19093.622009
ILS 4.122141
IMP 0.85761
INR 96.903105
IQD 1488.317145
IRR 47879.587021
ISK 144.915085
JEP 0.85761
JMD 179.973438
JOD 0.806207
JPY 162.421078
KES 147.063399
KGS 99.275054
KHR 4547.718921
KMF 494.009783
KPW 1023.186037
KRW 1627.9116
KWD 0.348565
KYD 0.946784
KZT 587.129982
LAK 24569.662992
LBP 101798.212379
LKR 340.784391
LRD 227.226202
LSL 21.201955
LTL 3.357102
LVL 0.687727
LYD 6.217101
MAD 10.537529
MDL 19.626577
MGA 5112.814181
MKD 61.501446
MMK 2386.566532
MNT 4028.328909
MOP 9.078964
MRU 45.013931
MUR 51.366756
MVR 17.514651
MWK 1970.045878
MXN 22.287555
MYR 4.974121
MZN 72.764445
NAD 21.201955
NGN 1830.022712
NIO 41.813056
NOK 11.859084
NPR 155.033149
NZD 1.898214
OMR 0.43773
PAB 1.136081
PEN 4.192887
PGK 4.702471
PHP 64.046394
PKR 319.338027
PLN 4.277732
PYG 9093.441039
QAR 4.141469
RON 4.978342
RSD 117.032626
RUB 94.590475
RWF 1622.402469
SAR 4.264811
SBD 9.478688
SCR 16.255643
SDG 682.728527
SEK 10.934066
SGD 1.491916
SHP 0.89346
SLE 25.865349
SLL 23841.143557
SOS 649.260508
SRD 41.853249
STD 23532.459938
SVC 9.941171
SYP 14782.724198
SZL 21.192257
THB 37.951109
TJS 12.071373
TMT 3.990676
TND 3.3916
TOP 2.662834
TRY 43.681759
TTD 7.708726
TWD 36.89772
TZS 3052.696265
UAH 47.370957
UGX 4165.331139
USD 1.136945
UYU 47.653705
UZS 14632.572669
VES 94.721047
VND 29593.53376
VUV 136.20553
WST 3.151926
XAF 654.908465
XAG 0.033786
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.07265
XDR 0.817673
XOF 654.908465
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.835616
ZAR 21.356455
ZMK 10233.869703
ZMW 31.953841
ZWL 366.095732
  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.45

    +0.71%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    72.26

    +0.76%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.31

    +0.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    9.84

    +3.46%

  • CMSC

    0.1700

    22.33

    +0.76%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    61.69

    +2.42%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    9.95

    +2.01%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    37.5

    +1.25%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    53.17

    +0.88%

  • BCC

    2.7600

    96.09

    +2.87%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.6

    +0.87%

  • BTI

    -0.0600

    42.45

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.4000

    29

    +1.38%

  • AZN

    1.0400

    69.55

    +1.5%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    22.01

    -0.95%

Clean streets vs business woes: pollution charge divides Londoners
Clean streets vs business woes: pollution charge divides Londoners / Photo: Justin TALLIS - AFP

Clean streets vs business woes: pollution charge divides Londoners

For Londoner Beau Boka-Batesa, air quality has drastically improved in the British capital following the rollout and expansion of a contested car pollution toll two years ago.

Text size:

Now, Boka-Batesa, 21, feels like they can walk down a high street and "not cough as much".

"It's so much more evident that things aren't as bad as they used to be," said Boka-Batesa, who co-founded the "Choked Up" campaign group for young, ethnic minority Londoners living in areas of high pollution.

As French lawmakers debate doing away with their version of a low-emissions zone on Tuesday, UK researchers and campaigners have hailed the effectiveness of the toll in improving London's air quality.

The Ultra Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ) -- the world's largest pollution charging scheme -- was implemented in central London in 2019, before expanding to Greater London's nine million residents in 2023.

It requires motorists to switch to low-emission vehicles or face a daily charge of £12.50 ($15.90, 14.60 euros) for driving a polluting car within the zone.

Its expansion saw fierce opposition from outer London residents, with local councils launching unsuccessful legal challenges and hundreds of ULEZ cameras vandalised by disgruntled residents.

While many Londoners are still holding out against the policy championed by Mayor Sadiq Khan, others are resigned or have even come around to its benefits.

A study published by Khan's government last month showed a significant drop in air pollution compared to a scenario without ULEZ, including 27 percent lower levels of toxic NO2 gas emitted from vehicle exhausts across London.

And nearly 97 percent of London vehicles were compliant with low emissions standards as of September 2024, compared to just 39 percent in 2017.

- 'Kills businesses' -

But according to music business owner Roger Tichborne, some polluting car owners are simply being shut out of the capital, with residents on the outer edges avoiding coming into London.

Since ULEZ was expanded to his Mill Hill neighbourhood in northwest London in 2023, his studio business has seen a 15-20 percent drop in bands coming from outside the zone to use his rehearsal space.

"They've just stopped coming because it's too expensive," Tichborne, 62, told AFP, adding his adjoining music shop had taken a 30 percent cut in business.

Like many outer London residents, Tichborne has also resorted to measures like taking longer detours in his Ford Galaxy diesel car to avoid ULEZ cameras and charges.

Alongside ULEZ, Khan had introduced a "scrappage" scheme providing financial support for replacing non-compliant cars, however, Tichborne said changing cars was still too expensive.

The music studio owner accused Khan of providing insufficient help for small businesses and musicians -- many of whom rely on older, polluting vans to transport their equipment.

"When you design measures that are going to affect large amounts of the population, you have to do it in a way that you don't kill businesses," he said.

"My issue with it is not the fact that the air is cleaner. My issue with it is the fact that it's badly implemented."

While he is still opposed to the scheme, Tichborne conceded that "people in London have, by and large, changed their cars or learnt to live with it".

- Effective tool -

For Boka-Batesa, "transparency and open communication" were necessary to "ensure that people's needs are at the forefront of it all".

According to another study into the impacts of ULEZ on children's health published in March, the scheme had the capacity to "both narrow and exacerbate inequities".

While some outer London families struggled to replace cars or switch to public transport, the report found that more primary school students were choosing "active" modes of travelling to school, such as cycling and walking.

"Introducing a clean air zone, in particular ULEZ, has wider societal benefits," said Christopher Griffiths, senior author and professor at London's Queen Mary University.

"It goes beyond just cleaning the air, it's about how we live."

Respondents from deprived areas who reported living in the most polluted parts of central London experienced the "greatest impact of reduced pollution levels", according to the study.

The "data is clear that the ULEZ has delivered a massive improvement in air quality beyond what was expected or predicted", Griffiths said.

According to the researcher, ULEZ, France's under-threat "Zones a Faibles Emissions" (ZFE) -- and over 300 similar "clean air schemes" across Europe -- are vital solutions.

"They're the one public health tool that we have that is being shown to be effective."

H.Nadeem--DT