Skip to main content

EarthSense sensors deployed on BBC Fighting for Air project

Birmingham's 'leave your car at home' project has significantly reduced nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in the Kings Heath area, in an initiative led by residents, television producers and Dr. Xan van Tulleken who presented the pilot on the BBC's Fighting for Air program. The project used EarthSense's Zephyr air quality monitoring sensors to obtain the improved air quality results.The experiment urged residents to switch to public transport or walk for their daily commute while the sensors monitored air pollution
January 15, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

Birmingham's 'leave your car at home' project has significantly reduced nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in the Kings Heath area, in an initiative led by residents, television producers and Dr. Xan van Tulleken who presented the pilot on the BBC's Fighting for Air program. The project used EarthSense's Zephyr air quality monitoring sensors to obtain the improved air quality results.

The experiment urged residents to switch to public transport or walk for their daily commute while the sensors monitored air pollution on the day and compared it to recordings elsewhere in Birmingham as well as against previous real-time measurements in the area.

In addition, Zephyr measured the baseline of air pollution along Kings Heath High Street and outside St Dunstan's Catholic Primary school. It revealed consistently high readings across the course of each of the proceeding three days with peaks of NO2 during rush hour and school drop off and pick-ups.

Professor Roland Leigh, technical director of EarthSense Systems, said: “We need to reinvent our high streets and communities to encourage relaxing and enjoyable environments, and clean and healthy air is a key part of the package. The EarthSense air quality sensors provide a tangible way of recording and presenting evidence which can be used to plan and promote further initiatives. This programme clearly demonstrates the positive outcomes that can be achieved as a result of community action.”

Related Content

  • November 18, 2022
    Airly cleans up with $5.5m funding
    Air quality platform provides data infrastructure to allow cities to reduce pollutants
  • February 17, 2016
    London Borough deploys unattended CCTV enforcement
    The London Borough of Barnet has awarded OpenView Security Solutions a contract to supply and maintain CCTV cameras and software for the unattended enforcement of moving traffic contraventions. The Videalert-based platform will initially be used to enforce a range of moving traffic contraventions at more than 20 locations as well as being deployed outside 32 schools to increase road safety for children across the borough. Chairman of Barnet Council’s Environment Committee, Dean Cohen, said: “The int
  • July 24, 2017
    Traffex snapshot reveals enforcement advances
    An indication of just how far beyond spot speed and red light the enforcement sector has progressed was evident in the range of new and improved equipment on display at the recent Traffex event in Birmingham. One of the key trends, particularly in the UK but also evident elsewhere, is the increase in average speed enforcement, according to RedSpeed’s managing director Robert Ryan, who predicts a big increase in installations this year. “The price point has reached a level authorities can afford,” he says, a
  • August 6, 2020
    Chicago maps out air quality reform agenda 
    Move follows disturbing report from the city's Department of Public Health