Colin Sowman talks to Matthew Pencharz, the man charged with charting London’s path between catering for traveller needs, conserving ancient buildings and conforming to modern air quality standards.  
     
Every city has its own particular problems when it comes to transportation and, increasingly, air quality; none more so than London - administratively Europe’s largest city with a population of 8.4million. City planners have to contend with integrating today’s commerce amid a wealth of historic buildings and manage traffic travelling along roads originally built for horses and carts. And now the city’s authorities are under increasing pressure to improve air quality; not only as a moral imperative but also because the European Union is poised to fine the UK for repeatedly exceeding allowable pollution levels in London and elsewhere. 
     
Weighing up the problems and potential solutions is Matthew Pencharz, senior advisor for environment and energy to London Mayor, Boris Johnson.  Pencharz said: “London’s air quality challenge is easily the greatest in the UK but it is far from being alone in the UK, Europe and elsewhere in the world. Even relatively small cities can have serious air quality challenges.”
     
London’s population has been increasing by 100,000/yr and in the early 1990s (before the position of London Mayor was reintroduced) the UK’s Department of Transport created no-stopping Red Routes in the capital. Although these make up only 5% of London’s total road length they carry more than 30% of its traffic. Investment in public transport by the existing and previous London Mayors has meant the increase in population has not been reflected in a corresponding increase in congestion.
     
“A large redistribution of the road space, previously to buses under Mayor Livingstone and now to cyclists with Mayor Johnston, means the city hasn’t seized up and there has also been a reduction in London-based car ownership. While we recognise that many Londoners will continue to need cars, we are focused in large part on public transport development and ensuring people can get on trains, underground and buses. 
     
“In London we are doing more than any city in Europe, and arguably the world, to try to address the air quality challenge and we are on top of eight of the nine regulated pollutants. NO2 is the one that’s causing us most difficulties; PM10 [small particulate matter below 10 microns] is also difficult although we are just about on top of that one.”
 
Around 40% of London’s NOx (which includes NO2) and PM10 pollutants come from sources outside the capital. In 2008 a low-emission zone (LEZ) was established under Mayor Livingstone which surcharged commercial vehicles that did not meet certain emissions limits. Recent analysis of NOx emissions shows that road transport across London contributes around 50% to total NOx, and in central London buses make up a third of this. TfL’s 8,000 strong bus fleet is the single biggest contributor followed by taxis and diesel cars.
“Since the current Mayor was elected we’ve tightened vehicle standards in the LEZ so all vehicles except private cars and motorcycles have to meet a certain standard for PM and we’ve just finished making our bus fleet even cleaner. It was already the world’s cleanest fleet for its size and we have retired some of the older buses early and retrofitted a large number with additional exhaust equipment so they release less NOx and NO2 (see box).We’ve also brought in age limits to take older taxis and minicabs off the road.
 “The numbers of Londoners living in areas which exceed the NO2 limits  have halved from around 3.6m in 2008 to 1.7m – although that obviously  indicates there is still a problem.  Many of the air quality hot spots  are adjacent to traffic lights so there are issues to do with traffic  flows. If we can have fewer vehicles braking, accelerating and idling at  junctions we can to a degree mitigate the air quality impact so we have  been installing the SCOOT [Split Cycle Offset Optimisation Technique]  traffic lights.” 
 
SCOOT  technology which changes signal timings dynamically depending on  traffic  levels and has been shown to reduce traffic disruption by  between 8%  and 12%. By the end of 2018 three quarters of all traffic  signals will  use the SCOOT technology.
     
As   part of a Pedestrian Safety Action Plan, TfL has already announced  that  audible alerts or tactile rotating cones for visually impaired   pedestrians will be installed at all traffic lights with a pedestrian   phase by 2016. And new or upgraded pedestrian crossings will look to   include Pedestrian Countdown and their use will be expanded across all   33 London boroughs in the coming years. 
“The  countdown timers show pedestrians how much time they have to  safely  cross the road and this also has the effect of allowing a few  more cars  through which eases congestion,” said Pencharz. 
     
“In   its evidence to the EU Commission the government said the UK won’t  meet  the NO2 limits by 2030 or beyond; we [in London] reckon we can  bring  that forward to 2020. The Mayor can do two thirds of that largely   through the Ultra-Low Emission Zone (ULEZ), a buildings retrofit   programme and the introduction of construction equipment requirements.”    
     
This non road traffic   measures come about because analysis indicates that 39% of NOx emissions   come from non-road mobile machinery and 24% from non-domestic gas   appliances. 
 
“We are   driving a large buildings  retrofit programme to reduce emissions from   boilers… and new  standards on emissions from construction equipment used   in the  capital. We also have a big urban greening programme which is   planting  trees in London streets to suck up pollution which is very   exciting  because beyond improving air quality, it makes the area a nicer   place  to live and work.” 
     
  The   construction equipment requirements will come  into effect in 2015 as a   condition of granting planning permission and  from 2018, all newly   licenced black cabs will have to be zero emissions  capable. 
     
However,    Pencharz said the key to tackling the air quality problems is the    proposed ULEZ which will continue to have the same boundaries as the    current Congestion Charge scheme. By 2020 the scheme envisages a £10    surcharge on all diesel vehicles entering the ULEZ unless they meet the    latest Euro 6 emission standards (which have just taken effect) and,    unlike the existing scheme, it will include passenger cars and    motorbikes.
 Both the   Congestion Charge and LEZ schemes use the same ANPR-based  enforcement   system. In the case of the LEZ the captured registrations  are cross   referenced to provide details of the vehicle’s age, from  which the   relevant emissions compliance is derived. 
     
Still    under consideration are the times the proposed ULEZ scheme will be    operational. If implemented on a 24/7 basis the projection is that road    transport related NOx emissions will be reduced by 57%. Alternatively,    if it follows the Congestion Charge times (7am – 6pm Monday to  Friday)   the expected reduction would be 27%. 
Acknowledging    that the inclusion of private vehicles in the ULEZ   would be    controversial, Pencharz is resolute: “We think six years   notice is a    long time and enables the market to adjust long before   the proposed ULEZ    comes into effect. Some people want the ULEZ to be   introduced within a    year but we think that’s unreasonable as   residents and businesses  have   bought vehicles in good faith and they   need a decent amount of  time to   make the necessary changes.   Furthermore, the economic and  political   impact would not be   acceptable, especially as some of these  measures can   be regressive   and hit the poorer households hardest. The  Mayor has to   balance a lot   of factors.”  
     
Like     many cities, London is divided by a river which concentrates roads,     rail, metro and pedestrian traffic giving rise to congestion at these     crossings - including at the Blackwall Tunnel. “The Blackwall Tunnel is     one of the worst pinch-points in the country and with a large number   of   queuing vehicles the air quality in the Greenwich/Woolwich area  is   quite  a problem. We can’t carry on like that. So while there is  little   scope  for large road building in London, we have proposed a  new   crossing to  ease congestion in the Blackwall Tunnel area.” 
     
Mayor     Johnson is particularly known for commissioning a new double decker     bus, his pro-cycling views and the setting up of a bike hire scheme   that   now offers more than 10,000 pedal cycles spread across 1002km of     Central London. Bicycles can now account for up to 25% of traffic in   the   morning peak. But the increase in cycling has not been achieved    without  incident as was tragically illustrated in a two week period in    November  2013 when six London cyclists were killed in separate    incidents. 
     
 “Every  death   is awful but statistically speaking  the overall accidents rate  for  2013  was average and the trend has  been declining over the years.  What  was  particularly awful was that  these fatalities happened extremely   quickly  after having had very few  in the previous months. That may   sound cold  but you can’t make  policy off the back of one month’s   figures, as bad  as they were, and I  as I said, over time we have seen   the number of  KSIs [killed and  seriously injured] coming down.
     
“We     are sorting out poorly designed junctions that are particularly     difficult for cyclists but you have to consider the impact on other road     users too. We are seeing transformational schemes and it takes time   to   find the right balance for all road users.”
     
TfL   is   to accelerate the installation low level cycle signals at key    junctions  across the capital and is also leading by example having    pledged that  all its traffic signals will use energy efficient LEDs in    the future.
     
It  is yet  to   be seen if the measures being implemented will mead to  compliance   with  European air quality standards but the fact remains that  London   is  setting a credible example to other cities looking to tackle    pollution. 
 
    Box Travel in London         
         
For over a century London’s commuters have had many travel options so although large numbers of people travel into central London each day, only a relatively small proportion do so by car. London Underground is now 150 years old, has 400km (250 miles) of track (half of which is above ground), 270 stations and carries around 1.25 billion passengers per year. There are a further 83 main line stations with the busiest, Waterloo, handling 82 million passengers per year.  And there 70 million pre-payment Oyster cards have been issued.
         
London’s streets also host 23,000 of the famous Black Cabs and 8,750 buses which carry more than 2 billion passengers per year.    
     
 Bus retrofit         
         
In the trial aimed at reducing NOX and NO2 emissions along Putney High Street, 93 London buses based in the Putney bus garage were retrofitted with a selective catalytic reduction system adapted for urban driving conditions. Studies by the contractor showed that these buses accounted for around half of all bus and coach movements along Putney High Street - the remainder being either hybrid (5%) or with factory fitted emissions control technology. 
         
During the monitoring period 450,000 unique registration plates were captured and 2.6 million paired (north and south bound) journeys were recorded. Buses and coaches comprised 14% of the total vehicles recorded, 0.9% were heavy goods vehicles and there were 40 plant/construction vehicles per day. 
         
Following the retrofit, and with meteorology effects removed, kerbside concentrations of NOx and NO2 fell by 24% and 23% respectively (to 283 and 112µg/m3) but within three months the levels increased again to 348 and 128µg/m3. 
         
Due to the nature of the NO2 reduction the number of hourly exceedences of the 200μg/m3 EU Limit threshold per month was more marked than the reduction in mean concentrations. This resulted in 42% and 71% fewer exceedences at the kerb and façade (respectively) compared with the same period a year earlier. 
     
 
    
        
        



