Skip to main content

Egis secures Manchester CAZ contract

Clean Air Zone will open in UK city next year, with ANPR cameras from Yunex Traffic
By Adam Hill September 3, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
CAZ introduced to comply with NO2 legal limits on local roads by 2024 at the latest (© Shahid Khan | Dreamstime.com)

Egis has been awarded a new contract to help deliver what it says is the largest Clean Air Zone (CAZ) in the UK.

It will set up and operate an end-to-end service for Greater Manchester’s CAZ programme for the next five years with Yunex Traffic and Imperial Civil Enforcement Solutions.

Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) is delivering the CAZ project on behalf of the 10 Greater Manchester local authorities.

A trial and testing period will run over four months between February and May next year.

Due to launch on 30 May 2022, the CAZ will operate seven days a week, 24 hours a day, enforced by Yunex's 900 ANPR cameras.

The aim of the CAZ is to comply with nitrogen dioxide (NO2) legal limits on local roads by 2024 at the latest.

“This contract is aligned to our overall vision for the digitalisation and environmental transition of city services,” says Renaud Beziade, Egis CEO of project structuring, operation and new services.

Yunex is involved in a similar project in another UK city, Birmingham.

Councillor Andrew Western, the city's lead for clean air, said air pollution is "the biggest environmental public health issue facing the city-region and contributes to around 1,200 deaths in Greater Manchester alone each year".

The contract period is for five and a half years with possible extensions for another three. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Transit’s Covid clean-up operation
    August 24, 2021
    The onset of Covid-19 saw ridership on public transport slump drastically. How will the organisations that provide these essential services persuade customers back on board?
  • Canada pumps Can$400m into bike lanes
    March 26, 2021
    Money will support rural communities and places without active transportation
  • Viaduct deck renewal creates detour dilemma for MassDOT
    May 26, 2016
    As the deck renewal of the I-91 viaduct in Springfield gets underway, David Crawford looks at the preparation and planning to ease the resulting traffic congestion. Accommodating the deck renewal of a 4km-long/four-lanes in each direction viaduct in the heart of Springfield (Massachusetts’ third largest city), has involved the state’s Department of Transportation (MassDOT) in a massive exercise in transport research and ITS-based area-wide preplanning and traffic management. Supporting a workzone of well ab
  • TWM wins UK traffic sign deal
    March 1, 2021
    Firm to supply and install all electronic vehicle-activated signage in England’s Wirral