Smog!
Comments
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I like the way Bristol has tried out travel lanes for cars with more than one person. Bristol also encourages cycling with some good designated cycle lanes. In London my friend's husband cycled to work each day but it wasn't a good experience. The place
I use park and ride is Bath, another good system there.0 -
At the moment (WHO lists) Port Talbot tops the pollution list, followed by Stanford le Hope, Glasgow and London, in that order.
Write your comments here...Thank you for that information Brue. But Stanford le hope and Port Talbot are not cities. ---It is city centres which suffer most through traffic polution and the proposal that Electric vehicles be the only permitted vehicles allowed into large city centres is certainly a good one.
Vehicles using internal combustion engines are fine for use outside City centres and that would not change. It is a case of looking at the whole picture.
Cheers ..............K
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Provide subsidies to allow containers and goods to travel by rail and then electric vehicles to transport to their local destination. Similar for electric cars in urban areas.Reduce CO2 considerably.
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At the moment (WHO lists) Port Talbot tops the pollution list, followed by Stanford le Hope, Glasgow and London, in that order.
Write your comments here...Thank you for that information Brue. But Stanford le hope and Port Talbot are not cities. ---It is city centres which suffer most through traffic polution and the proposal that Electric vehicles be the only permitted vehicles allowed into large city centres is certainly a good one.
Vehicles using internal combustion engines are fine for use outside City centres and that would not change. It is a case of looking at the whole picture.
Cheers ..............K
I quoted this because you said London had the worst pollution but Glasgow appears to have more. If you read the details Stanford LH is polluted by traffic in the London area, local "super"ports and weather patterns. Much of the pollution is traffic related in these towns and cities.
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Provide subsidies to allow containers and goods to travel by rail and then electric vehicles to transport to their local destination. Similar for electric cars in urban areas.Reduce CO2 considerably.
But don't expect next day delivery. More like next week or next month.
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It will be interesting to see how London pollution levels change in the next few years, before any radical changes to vehicle types happens. Over 25% of London streets now have a 20mph limit for road safety purposes, not to deal with pollution. Does anyone know if this means that emissions and pollution levels rise or reduce because of the lower speed? I'm interested because our son lives in one of the boroughs which has been most keen to introduce the lower speed limits.
Like Tombar, I remember the bad old days of 'smogs' and the smell of the yellowish mist!!!
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At the moment (WHO lists) Port Talbot tops the pollution list, followed by Stanford le Hope, Glasgow and London, in that order.
Write your comments here...Thank you for that information Brue. But Stanford le hope and Port Talbot are not cities. ---It is city centres which suffer most through traffic polution and the proposal that Electric vehicles be the
only permitted vehicles allowed into large city centres is certainly a good one.Vehicles using internal combustion engines are fine for use outside City centres and that would not change. It is a case of looking at the whole picture.
Cheers ..............K
I live not very far from Port Talbot. The main polluter there is probavly the steelworks.
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If London goes electrice cars only, will Rolls Royce produce a suitable "palace on wheels" ? As I can't see the "fat cats" of business being driven around in Nissan Leafs Let alone the rich and famous!
In today's climate , that would kill off London as a major player in the financial world.
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