Skip to main content

VivaCity senses change in the air in Sheffield

Sensors will assess whether UK city's Clean Air Zone is cutting harmful levels of NO2
By Adam Hill September 7, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
VivaCity: real-world evidence

Sheffield City Council in the UK has implemented a network of 17 VivaCity traffic monitoring sensors, alongside air quality sensors, to assess the impact of the area’s newly-introduced Clean Air Zone (CAZ).

Over the next three years, the sensors will look at traffic flow on the city's outer ring road and the impact of the CAZ on pollutants, in an attempt to capture the environmental and health benefits of reduced vehicle activity. 

Sheffield’s CAZ is a class C chargeable zone for the most polluting heavy and light goods vehicles, vans, buses, coaches and taxis, and its purpose is to lower harmful levels of NO2 in the city.

The council suggests air pollution is causing up to 36,000 deaths in the UK every year - with between 250 and 500 in Sheffield itself - and causing serious illnesses such as strokes, lung cancer and cardiovascular disease. 

The council's director of public health, Greg Fell, says: “When it comes to air pollution the evidence is clear – there is no ‘safe limit’."

Mark Nicholson, CEO and co-founder at VivaCity, adds: “With the implementation of the [UK] government’s Clean Air Plan and Clean Air Zones, it is crucial to monitor traffic flow, emissions, and air quality."

"We hope to continue delivering sustainable transport plans based on real-world evidence," he concludes.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • C40 mayors make global ‘clean air’ pledge
    October 11, 2019
    In a move that will have significant implications for urban transit, 35 mayors at this week’s C40 World Mayors Summit in Copenhagen have pledged to “implement substantive clean air policies by 2025”. Among other developments, this is likely to mean further increases in low- or zero-carbon public transport and zero-emissions zones, along with enhanced incentives and infrastructure to support walking and cycling, in cities worldwide. Signing the C40 Clean Air Cities Declaration, the mayors signalled their
  • Funding boost to cut pollution from local buses
    August 30, 2013
    Towns and cities in England are set to benefit from US$7.7 million of funding to reduce pollution from local buses, Local Transport Minister Norman Baker has announced. A total of eleven local authorities have been awarded grants from the Department for Transport’s (DfT) Clean Bus Technology Fund, which will allow almost 400 buses to be upgraded.
  • Innovate UK to provide update on low emission trials at Microlise
    January 30, 2018
    Innovate UK will present an update on the £20m ($28m) government Low Emission Freight and Logistics Trials (LEFT) at the Microlise Transport Conference held in Coventry this May. The trials have deployed hydrogen dual-fuel vehicles, electric vans and trucks with the intention of encouraging the wide-spread introduction of low and zero emission vehicles to UK fleets.
  • ITF diagnoses South Asia’s breathing difficulties
    August 26, 2022
    One of the world’s fastest-growing regions faces major transport sector decisions if it is to avoid spiralling emissions problems in coming decades. Alan Dron takes a look at a new report on Asia from the International Transport Forum