Title: London Low Emission Zone On Target
1Murad Qureshi AM, London Wide Assembly Member
19th September 2007
2Low Emission Zone. Cleaner Air for Greater London
Murad Qureshi AM
- LEZ Background
- LEZ Projected Impacts
- LEZ Progress
- Waterborne Freight as a Greener alternative
- Historical perspective
- 2007 trial
- Outcomes and Possibilities
- Questions
3What is the London Low Emission Zone?
- Aims to improve air quality and achieve
associated health benefits - Geographically defined area
- Discourages the most individually polluting
vehicles from being driven in London - Requires heaviest diesel-engined vehicles to meet
strict emissions standards to drive within London
- The LEZ does not ban vehicles from London,
non-compliant vehicles can pay a charge - Operates 24 hours a day, 365 days per year, using
fixed and mobile cameras - Few discounts and exemptions to maintain benefits
4(No Transcript)
5What would the LEZ achieve?
- Reductions in tonnes of PM10 and NOx emitted
- Reductions in areas of London exceeding UK air
quality objectives / EU limit values - Range of health benefits- gains in life
expectancy- reductions in premature deaths-
reductions in hospital admissions- reductions in
respiratory problems - Other non-health benefits, including reductions
in buildings damage and small noise reductions
6 Projected Air Quality Impacts
- 2008 proposals (trucks, buses coaches Euro III
for Particulate Matter) would reduce area of
London exceeding - annual mean PM10 objective by some 5.8
- daily mean PM10 objective by some 7.4
- annual mean NO2 objective by some 3.7
- 2012 proposals (trucks, buses coaches Euro IV
for Particulate Matter heavier vans minibuses
at Euro III) would reduce area of London
exceeding - annual mean PM10 objective by some 16.2
- 24 hour mean PM10 objective by some 14.7
- annual mean NO2 Objective by some 15.6
-
7Vehicles Affected by the LEZ
HGVs gt12t
Heavy diesel-engined vehicles gt12 tonnes
- Includes
- Goods Vehicles
- Motor Caravans
- Motorised Horseboxes
Feb 2008 Euro III Jan 2012 Euro IV
Heavy diesel-engined vehicles between 3.5 and 12
tonnes
HGVs 3.5t gt 12t
- Includes
- Goods Vehicles
- Motor Caravans
- Motorised Horseboxes
July 2008 Euro III Jan 2012 Euro IV
Buses Coaches
Heavy diesel-engined passenger vehicles gt 5 tonne
- Includes
- Vehicles with more than eight seats, plus the
drivers seat
July 2008 Euro III Jan 2012 Euro IV
cont
8Vehicles Affected by the LEZ
Diesel-engined vehicles between 1.205 tonnes
unladen and 3.5 tonnes
Large Vans
- Includes
- Ambulances
- Motor Caravans
Oct 2010 Euro III
Minibuses
Diesel-engined passenger vehicles below 5 tonnes
- Includes
- Vehicles with less than eight seats, plus the
drivers seat
Oct 2010 Euro III
9London Low Emission Zone On Target
- Key Milestones 2007 - Overview
- May ? The Mayor approves The Scheme Order and
LEZ enquiries service launched - June ? Major Public Information campaign
launched (ongoing) - July ? LEZ registration service launched
- Sept ? VOSA commenced LEC / RPC testing to
support LEZ - Oct ? LEZ payments facility to be launched
10Key Dates to Remember
- Feb 08 Scheme starts for lorries gt12 t (Euro III
for PM) - July 08 Scheme starts for lorries lt12 t, buses
coaches (Euro III for PM) - Oct 2010 Scheme starts for heavier vans
minibuses - Jan 2012 Standards tightened for lorries, buses
coaches (Euro IV for PM)
11Waterborne Freight as a Greener Alternative
12Historic role of waterways in freight movement
- 18th Century
- Enormous expansion in trade, London as the
worlds busiest port - Building of Londons Docks commenced to cope
with increased trade in commodities from across
Empire - Places upriver like Reading receive 95 of goods
by river - Industrial revolution leads to rapid expansion of
canal system towards end of the century - 19th Century
- Port of London becomes central trading post for
vast British Empire, more docks build. - River and canal trade expands despite competition
from the new railway network.
13Historic role of waterways in freight movement
20th century Trends
- Huge decline in the use of the River Thames for
trade, in the Port of London area especially. - Closure of London docks due to factors such as
introduction of container ships needing deepwater
anchorage. - Development of containerisation new docks built
at Tilbury to handle lorries and containers from
all over the World. - Emphasis on trade and the Thames shifts downriver
and out of London itself. - Trade declined on upper River Thames, mainly
because goods were moved by road.
14Current Trends in Waterborne Freight Thames
- The Port of London is the UKs biggest port,
handling 52.4 million tonnes of cargo - Water currently accounts for almost 10 of
freight volume in London - In 1999, the 40 operational wharves within the
GLA boundary handled 10.9 million tonnes of
freight - The UKs largest container port will be build at
Shell Haven in Thurrock to allow London to grow
further trading opportunities
15Supplying Retailers by River Transport
- 2007 Sainsburys revisits the method of
transporting goods by river as it did originally
in 1869
16Sainsburys/PLA Trial
- Sainsburys and PLA cooperate in a trial during 5
consecutive days to assess whether the transport
of ambient (I.e. non-chilled) goods is feasible - 2 Full 20 containers (av. Weight of 11 tonnes)
loaded onto a barge at Terminal in Greenwich,
close to regional distribution centre - Barge starts journey one hour later every day and
proceeds upriver as far as Smugglers way in
Wandsworth in close proximity to a West London
store
17Preliminary Outcomes of Trial
- Provided demonstrable evidence that upper reaches
of the Thames are appropriate for transport of
time sensitive goods rather than just heavy, bulk
goods - On a number of days the river barge beat the HGV
on the journey between Greenwich and Wandsworth - Sainsburys and PLA believe that if river
transport would be rolled out to stores in the
West London area, it would save 350,000 road
kilometres per year - Moving freight to the river could contribute to
Sainsburys target of a reducing CO2 emissions by
25 2012
18Advantages of River Transport
- Water freight doesnt face traffic build up
- Moves faster than traffic on Central London Roads
- Free Energy provided by the river itself as tide
helps propel the vessel - Environmentally sustainable alternative that
causes less congestion on Londons roads
19Turning Trial into a viable service?
- Need to secure necessary land-site infrastructure
at both downstream end (Charlton) and and
upstream in Fulham/Wandsworth - Several partners (Mayor, PLA, GLA, TfL, LDA)
working together to reactivate safeguarded
wharves for this use and to secure location for
an upriver container terminal
20New Trend?
- Will the success of this trial and the ongoing
cooperation between several organisations lead to
increased use of Londons waterways for
transport? - Will large retailers like Sainsburys start to
make increased use of this alternative in order
to be seen as Green and avoid the LEZ?
21Further Information
- Phone 0845 607 0009 Email
lezlondon_at_tfl.gov.uk Web www.tfl.gov.uk/lezlondo
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