In 1992, the United Nations named Mexico City as the world’s most polluted urban centre. In the first half of 2016, following the updating of pollution alert limits to meet international standards, Mexico recorded 115 days where ozone concentrations exceeded the acute exposure health limit.  
     
Pollution reached levels not experienced in the previous decade because of adverse climatic conditions - including thermal inversions which inhibit pollutants from naturally rising and dispersing. Conditions on 16 of these days exceeded the of cial pollution alert level, leading to number plate-based restrictions on car movements.  
     
Such measures did, as in the past, bear fruit, ITS México president José Azcárate told ITS International. But there are inherent problems resulting from inadequacies in the city’s vehicle ownership registry and the network of engine checking stations that inhibit the effective monitoring of an estimated 3.5 million cars. In the short term Azcárate sees little prospect of the widescale introduction of technology-driven improvements. 
     
The 2016 events occurred during the recent series of ProAire anti-pollution programmes, a joint initiative run by the Mexican government and the city, which started in 1990. These have achieved worthwhile results - for example, a 7.7 million tonne reduction in carbon emissions from all sources over the period 2008-2012, against a target of 7 million tonnes.
     
This latest phase, which runs until 2020, includes measures for the greening of the municipal transport  eets but comes against a continuing backdrop of dense and heavily congested stop-go traffic.
     
The problem is one of geography. The Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México, which incorporates the national capital and neighbouring municipalities, lies 2,200m above sea level, a height that makes for the less-than-ideal combustion of fossil fuels. Mexico City also sits in a natural basin, virtually surrounded by mountains which trap the polluted air, so cutting the number of and emissions from road vehicles remains a crucial target. 
     
In the meantime, fleets of inefficient trucks and cars continue to consume dirty diesel fuels and emit high levels of black carbon (a classified carcinogen and a powerful contributor to climate change) and particulate matter. These effusions are poisoning the environment and people’s health.
 
     
 
New initiatives
     
Recently  the Geneva-based 
     
It  also urges a combination of on-board vehicle diagnostic systems and  dynamic tailpipe exhaust tests, as the basis for a mandatory regime for  restricting access by unsatisfactory vehicles. Monitoring would  initially be manual, at inspection stations, and progressively move to  remote on-road sensing. Mexico City has already carried out research  into remote sensing with a view to securing more widespread and reliable  results. It is also the subject of a current worldwide surge of  interest, which is making international experience readily available. 
     
However,  the city’s environmental department has faced challenges (on  constitutional grounds) to such a regime being made mandatory, and the  ITF has offered the results of its own research as supporting evidence.  Azcárate told ITS International: “Any technology that could support  compliance needs to rest on two basic elements: legal certainty and  defined standards for vehicles to meet. Unfortunately, neither is  currently present in its entirety.”  
     
The  ITF also recommended an early start on preparatory work for a low  emission zone (initially for freight vehicles) and the extension of the  80km/h limit on urban motorways and ring roads within Mexico City, and  more widely across the metropolitan area. It wants to encourage driving  at more constant speeds, which ‘produces immediate reductions in  emissions at very little cost’ and offers the most effective measure  available to lower tiers of governments for achieving these. The ITF  sees this as the best option that “does not affect personal mobility  negatively”. 
 
     
Mexico  City  previously rejected average speed detection on the grounds that  this  does not pick up peaks of sustained velocity, which Azcárate sees  as a  central issue for dealing with congestion. The ITF also urges the   extension of the Ecoparq meter network, introduced in 2012 to   rationalise largely free-for-all unregulated parking, across the   metropolis. It also wants to see parking charges differentiated to   reflect pressures on spaces in individual areas of the city and   incentivise modal shift where public transport and cycling facilities   are good (see box).
     
 
Better buses
     
In   the public transport sector, the ITF is encouraging the expansion of   the existing Metrobús bus rapid transit (BRT) network. Launched in 2005   on a busy 20km corridor route as part of ProAire III, this is now the   longest such network in Latin America, offering good connections with   the city’s metro system. 
     
Its   introduction gave a badly needed boost to the capital’s previously  poor  image for road-based public transit. It achieved what  ‘Restructuring  public transport through Bus Rapid Transit’, a global  reference work  published in 2016, called ‘transformative momentum’, by  enabling owners  of more than 900 out-of-date ‘microbuses’ to become  partners in new  operating concessions.
     
‘Officials   understood that the whole industry was watching, and that operators’   experience in the maiden BRT corridors would reverberate in future   negotiations’, the citation continued and said it served to establish   the role of the public sector in bus service regulation.  
     
During   its first six years, the initial BRT line was able to reduce CO2   equivalent emissions by 300,000 tonnes, a rate that rose to over 100,000   tonnes a year with subsequent expansions. 
     
BRT   has taken pressure off metro lines and other bus services and   subsequently achieved a degree of integration with the city’s cycle path   network. But success has brought its own problems, with high ridership   levels contributing to overcrowding and increased risk of missed   connections with other services - a clear case, says Azcárate, for the   introduction of ITS technology.
 
He doubts, however, whether the support systems needed for tracking operation, reviewing service frequencies, monitoring average speed in specific time slots and calculating passenger densities per hour and per stop are being fully used or maintained.
     
 
A miracle waiting to happen
Some of the ITF’s findings echo an earlier    intervention by the California, US-based Mario Molina Center for  Energy   and the Environment, which was founded and is directed by Mario  Molina,   the Mexican-born Nobel Prize-winning professor. It claims its  Milagro   (Megacity Initiative: Local Global and Research Observations)  programme   as the first international effort to study the  impact of a  megacity  on  air quality and climate, with the Mexican capital as the  chosen case   study. 
     
The  organisation   urged the integration of the 
     
In    terms of private vehicle use, it pushed not only for the promotion of    clean technologies, but also for fuel pricing that would take account   of  external costs. In the freight sector, it proposed achieving   reductions  in emissions by updating the country’s existing standards   for  heavy-duty vehicles to meet US 
     
This    process is now under way. The International Council on Clean    Transportation, which has offices in three continents, has carried out a    cost-benefit analysis for the period 2018-2037. It estimates a net   gain  across Mexico of US$123bn, including the value of avoided early   deaths  and reduced impacts on the climate.
 
     
These     generate large numbers of lengthy trips, which are typically made in     old and highly-polluting cars and microbuses. At the same time,   suburban   rail services tend to be underused, because of the lack of   strategies   for encouraging US-style transit-oriented development. 
     
The     ITF is therefore looking forward to the implementation of the New     Mobility Law for Mexico City, announced in 2014, which laid the     foundations for a new regulatory body for mass transit corridors and     transport operators. It also introduced the concept of mobility impact     assessments, to be implemented cooperatively by the city’s housing and     mobility departments. 
     
Meanwhile     ProAire continues, in conjunction with federal, state and air  quality    agencies in the metropolitan area. Azcárate finds it  “praiseworthy   that,  despite the lack of a legal framework and of  reliable vehicle   records,  and the daily movements of some 22 million  people, the city’s   air  quality indices are being maintained at  acceptable levels.” But   there is  widespread agreement that any  long-term solution will depend   on filling  the data and administrative  gaps, and deploying technology.   There is  likely to be a short-term  pause during the national and  Mexico  City  governments’ 2018 election  year, as the new  administrations bed  in. 
     
‘Restructuring     public transport through Bus Rapid Transit’ is published by Policy     Press www.press.uchicago.edu (ISBN 978 1 44732 616 8).
    
        
        
        
        



