Skip to main content

High Court challenge to begin against London's ULEZ expansion

Five councils in UK capital argue that ultra-low emission zone enlargement is unlawful
By Adam Hill July 4, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
ULEZ expansion: legal challenge (© ITS International | Adam Hill)

The expansion of London's ULEZ (ultra-low emission zone) to cover the whole of the UK capital from the end of August is the subject of a legal battle set to begin today.

The High Court is expected to hear arguments from five councils in and around London - Bexley, Bromley, Harrow, Hillingdon and Surrey County Council - on issues such as the statutory procedures that were followed in the decision to expand ULEZ and details of the vehicle scrappage scheme.

The ULEZ scheme currently covers inner London but the city's mayor Sadiq Khan wants it to extend past the North Circular and South Circular ring-roads to cover the outer boroughs within the M25 orbital motorway. He says it is a public health intervention, because 4,000 Londoners die prematurely each year as a direct result of air pollution

This will mean that anyone driving a non-compliant vehicle will have to pay £12.50 a day to drive anywhere in London.

However, Transport for London (TfL) argues that most vehicles on the road are already compliant, which means drivers won't need to pay.

Paul Osborn, leader of Harrow Council, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the expansion will have "a devastating impact on the poorest motorists". It would also hit businesses, he said, and "won't really improve the air quality in London".

Osborn suggested improving public electric vehicle charging infrastructure - which he described as currently "absolutely shocking" - would be a better policy, along with expanding the scrappage scheme to help people buy less polluting vehicles.

Hirra Khan Adeogun of climate action charity Possible told the BBC that more investment in public transport was required and there was a need to get people walking and cycling more. 

"The best time to have started this would have been 30 years ago; but the next best time to start it is actually today and tomorrow," she said. "Climate change is a real issue, air pollution is killing 4,000 people in London - we cannot dilly and dally and delay any longer."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • No city is a traffic island
    April 2, 2024
    Beate Kubitz reflects on the rising tide of suburban drivers - and how cities across Europe are dealing with them as worries over air quality multiply
  • New report indicates reduction in London’s pollution
    July 20, 2015
    A new report, produced by experts at King's College London, for the first time quantifies the health and economic effects of the air pollutant nitrogen dioxide (NO2), where all previous studies have focused on particulate matter (PM2.5). Combined together the effects of both pollutants reveal a higher health impact than previously estimated after taking into account this further pollutant. The study also found that nearly half the health impacts are caused by air pollution outside London such as diesel
  • Car-free zones part of London 'reimagining'
    May 18, 2020
    Parts of central London will become “one of the largest car-free zones in any capital city in the world”, according to the city’s mayor Sadiq Khan.
  • London to benefit from major roads programme
    March 4, 2014
    Dozens of locations across the UK capital are set to be transformed in a US$6.7 billion programme as part of the largest investment in the capital’s road and street network in a generation. In response to the recommendations of the Mayor’s Roads Task Force, a total of 50 projects are now underway. Alongside the transformation of 33 of London’s biggest and nastiest road junctions announced last week as part of the Mayor’s cycling programme, there will also be more than US$334 million of additional far-re