Levels of the harmful air pollutant nitrogen dioxide at a city-center monitoring station are the highest in Europe. Concentrations are greater even than in Beijing, where expatriates have dubbed the city’s smog the “airpocalypse.”
It’s the law of unintended consequences at work. European Union efforts to fight climate change favored diesel fuel
over gasoline because it emits less carbon dioxide, or CO2. However,
diesel’s contaminants have swamped benefits from measures that include a
toll drivers pay to enter central London, a thriving bike-hire program
and growing public-transport network.
“Successive governments
knew more than 10 years ago that diesel was producing all these harmful
pollutants, but they myopically plowed on with their CO2 agenda,” said
Simon Birkett, founder of Clean Air in London, a nonprofit group. “It’s
been a catastrophe for air pollution, and that’s not too strong a word.
It’s a public-health catastrophe.”
Read more @ Bloomberg News
London isn’t alone in having bad air in Europe, where 301 sites
breached the EU’s NO2 limits in 2012, including seven in the British
capital. Paris, Rome, Athens, Madrid,
Brussels and Berlin also had places that exceeded the ceiling. The
second and third-worst sites among 1,513 monitoring stations were both
in Stuttgart after London’s Marylebone Road.
“Nitrogen
dioxide is a problem that you get in all big cities with a lot of
traffic,” said Alberto Gonzalez Ortiz, project manager for air quality
at the European Environment Agency, which is based in Copenhagen. “In
many cases it’s gotten worse because of the new fleets of diesel cars.”
The
EU limits NO2 to a maximum of 40 micrograms per cubic meter of air. The
concentration on Marylebone Road, a stone’s throw from Regent’s Park,
was almost 94 micrograms in 2012, according to the most recent data from the EEA.
The level for the site last year was 81 micrograms, and it’s averaging 83 micrograms this year, according to King’s College London. In 1998, when the King’s College data begins, it was 92. That’s about the time the switch to diesel started.
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