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Managing Urban Air Quality:

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Title: Managing Urban Air Quality: Author: WB112528 Last modified by: wb265421 Created Date: 4/3/2002 11:11:16 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Urban Air Quality:


1
Managing Urban Air Quality
  • Essential Requirements

The World Bank 14 May 2002
2
What are priority areas?
  • Better understanding of sources linked to
    exposure
  • Right standards and regulations
  • Enforcement of standards
  • Urban planning coupled with strong traffic
    management
  • Efficient, financially viable and cleaner public
    transport sector

3
Better understanding of sources of exposure
  • Critical need in South Asia to understand where
    fine particles come from
  • Only preliminary and conflicting data available
  • Few data on elemental-to-organic carbon ratio
    suggest fossil fuel combustion important
  • Correlations between PM10 and NO2 collected over
    a year do not suggest transport as a main
    contributor
  • Need for focused investigation by researchers,
    coordination with government agencies, and rapid
    dissemination of information by the media and NGOs

4
Potential price of not knowing sources
  • Wrong sources targeted
  • Resources spent to fix the wrong problem ? Low
    benefit-to-cost ratio, only marginal improvement
    in air quality? Credibility of environmental
    policy called into question
  • Worsening air pollution problem as the important
    sources remain unaddressed

5
Right standards and regulations
  • If failure rate is high, evasion and corruption
    become rampant.
  • Example emission standards
  • If compliance cost is high and cannot be
    recovered (because of price control, for
    example), again evasion and corruption become
    common, or formal sector firms go bankrupt and
    informal sector operators take over.

6
Where should standards be pitched?
  • Manageable failure rate
  • Example 20 for in-use vehicle emission
    standards
  • Reasonable chances of monitoring and enforcement
  • If no capacity to monitor and enforce, no point
    in imposing standards
  • Standards should be tightened in areas where
    cost-effective measures are available

7
Enforcement of standards
  • Better to have lax standards that are enforced
    strictly, than stringent standards that are not
    enforced
  • Lack of enforcement discredits environmental
    policy
  • Greater potential for improvement with some
    enforcement than no enforcement
  • Check every operator vs. go after gross polluters
  • Example Monitoring frequency is increased for
    factories that have been caught in the past with
    non-compliance

8
How can we maximize use of limited resources?
  • Example Requirements of successful vehicle I/M
  • Targeted vehicles show up for tests
  • Gross polluters are less likely to report
  • Emission levels are accurately measured
  • Essential for identifying gross polluters
  • Test procedures do not allow temporary tuning to
    pass
  • High polluters are more likely to resort to
    temporary tuning to pass
  • System minimizes false passes and false failures
  • False passes and false failures discredit I/M

9
I/M Lessons from Mexico City
  • Suitable technology
  • Chassis dynamometer tests to enable NO
    measurements to prevent tuning late and lean
  • Administrative control
  • Blind test lanes, maximum automation, data sent
    directly to central location
  • Minimize incentives to cheat
  • Test and repair conflict of interest?
  • Must be profitable to run test lanes. Too many
    test centers resort to dishonesty to attract
    more customers

10
Too expensive?
  • Concentrate resources on identifying high-usage
    gross polluters ? test every vehicle twice or
    more a year
  • Candidate vehicle categories commercial certain
    age and older
  • Link commercial vehicle registration to passing
    the test

11
Encouragingmarket-based enforcement
  • Developing a competitive transparent market
  • By deregulating the sector with proper regulatory
    framework fuels (self-policing), industry
  • By enforcing standards and creating the need for
    industry focusing on compliance (repair shops,
    equipment manufacturers)
  • Informing the public
  • Abuses are possible in part because of
    information asymmetry
  • Example Clamping down on fuel adulteration,
    mis-labeling and short-selling
  • Public display of testing (Shell, Pakistan)
  • Seals of quality (Moscow)

12
Urban planning and traffic management
  • Issue
  • FSI in India is low, leading to unnecessary urban
    sprawl and lower investment
  • Increasing FSI in CBD can bring benefits if
    accompanied by strong traffic management.
  • Traffic management
  • Can realize significant short-term benefits
  • Is low cost
  • But requires
  • High degree of political, institutional and human
    resource commitment to ensure sustainability

13
How does traffic management work?
  • For a given fuel and vehicle combination, exhaust
    emissions depend strongly on vehicle speed and
    speed variability.
  • Traffic management improves traffic flows by
    reducing the number and duration of stops, and
    increasing travel speed.
  • A combination of traffic engineering, demand
    management, and measures giving priority to
    efficient public transport service is the best
    approach.
  • Benefits include lower emissions, better
    mobility, greater road and pedestrian safety, and
    more efficient use of road infrastructure.

14
What are key elements of successful traffic
management?
  • Establishing traffic management units with
    appropriate authority and ability to plan and
    implement traffic management measures
  • Involving police authorities working in concert
    with traffic management units
  • Implementing demand management in parallel
    because successful traffic management invites
    more traffic

15
Options for traffic management
  • Traffic signal control systems linking
    uncoordinated signals to create green waves,
    allowing nearside turn on red
  • Bus priority systems peak period bus lanes,
    segregated busways
  • Parking policies limiting on-street parking,
    requiring minimum parking provision in all new
    developments, pricing
  • Protection of non-motorized transport

16
Public transport sector reform
  • Shift to public transport can reduce congestion
    and emissions
  • Public transport must be made more attractive and
    cleaner to effect the shift and realize the
    benefits
  • Inefficient and cash-strapped public transport
    operators will not maintain vehicles or provide
    high quality service

17
Restructuring urban public transport sector
  • Stop the shift to small vehicles operating
    informally or to private cars by strengthening
    public transport
  • Incentives to improve internal efficiency
  • More efficient design of route networks
  • Incentives for efficiency improvement
  • Commercialization Operate on a commercial basis
    to be financially independent
  • Fair, transparent competition in a level playing
    field

18
Is competition bad for the environment?
  • Examples of adverse effects of competition
  • Excess supply Santiago, Chile
  • Use of old polluting vehicles Lima, Peru
  • Dangerous operating practices Delhi
  • ? Unregulated competition in the market can be
    dangerous and inefficient.

19
Regulated competition for the market
  • Award of exclusive franchises of limited duration
    and scope on the basis of a competitively bid
    tender
  • Fares and quality of service as criteria
  • Reductions in cost per km of 20-40
  • Examples Santiago de Chile Transmilenio
    Bogotás bus
  • rapid transit system

20
Transmilenio, Bogotá
  • Developed and implemented between 1/98 and 12/00
  • Exclusive busways on central lanes of major
    arterial roads, roads for feeder buses, stations
  • Express services in trunk lines, (closed)
    stations located every 500 m, up to 45,000
    passengers per hour per direction
  • No subsidies, ticket cost US0.36
  • Traffic accident fatalities eliminated, corridor
    PM emissions reduced by up to 30, travel time
    reduced by 1/3

21
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22
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23
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24
Recommendations
  • Address knowledge gaps in sources of fine
    particles, especially area sources.
  • Pursue multiple approaches to enforcement,
    including setting realistic standards and use of
    market mechanisms.
  • Design policy incentives that take into account
    the interests of different partiesand that
    follow realistic timetables.
  • Introduce industry and transport sector reforms
    aimed at making operators efficient and
    financially viable.
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