Skip to main content

Petrol/diesel cars could be fined for using London’s ‘electric streets’

Drivers in London, UK, could be fined £130 for not using electric or hybrid vehicles on nine ‘electric streets’. The project is intended to cut pollution and improve air quality. Drivers of petrol and diesel cars will be restricted from using some roads in the Shoreditch and Old Street areas of the city between 7am-10am and 4pm-7pm on weekdays.
September 4, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Drivers in London, UK, could be fined £130 for not using electric or hybrid vehicles on nine ‘electric streets’.


The project is intended to cut pollution and improve air quality.

Drivers of petrol and diesel cars will be restricted from using some roads in the Shoreditch and Old Street areas of the city between 7am-10am and 4pm-7pm on weekdays.

Only ultra-low emission vehicles (ULEVs), which emit less than 75/kg of carbon dioxide, will be able to use streets freely.

In the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external London <em>Evening Standard</em> false https://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/londons-first-ultralow-emissions-streets-everything-you-need-to-know-as-petrol-and-diesel-cars-are-a3923856.html false false%> Caroline Russell, London Assembly member, says that Islington and Hackney boroughs “have seized the opportunity to give people a really strong message about taking pollution seriously and to show the scale of London’s health emergency”.
 
The article explains the European Union legal limit for nitrogen dioxide - an annual average of 40 micrograms per cubic metre of air - was breached at more than 50 monitoring sites in London last year.

London mayor Sadiq Khan’s air quality fund is subsidising the initiative along with the UK government’s %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external Go Ultra Low City Scheme false https://www.londoncouncils.gov.uk/our-key-themes/transport/roads/gulcs false false%> – a project set-up to help establish London as the ‘ULEV capital of Europe’.

Roads involved in the scheme include Blackall Street, Cowper Street, Paul Street, Tabernacle Street, Ravey Street, Singer Street, Willow Street, Charlotte Road and Rivington Street.

Feryal Demirci, deputy mayor of Hackney, says: “Failing to act on poor air quality, which causes nearly 10,000 premature deaths across London every year, is not an option, and that’s why we’re being bolder than ever in our efforts to tackle it.”

Part of the initiative will take place in the streets surrounding Central Foundation Boys School in Islington.

Claudia Webbe, Islington council’s executive member for environment and transport, says it is the most polluted state secondary school in the capital.

The City of London Corporation intends to launch a similar scheme in April which will limit access to Moor Lane, near Moorgate, to ULEVs.

Related Content

  • April 17, 2019
    Lyft recalls 3,000 e-bikes across US
    Ride-hailing company Lyft has recalled 3,000 electric bikes from cities in the US because of concerns over their braking systems. The brands affected are Citi Bike in New York, Capital Bikeshare in Washington, DC, and the Bay Area’s Ford GoBike. A similar statement on each company’s website says: “We recently received a small number of reports from riders who experienced stronger than expected braking force on the front wheel. Out of an abundance of caution, we are proactively removing the pedal-assi
  • October 30, 2015
    Upcoming Flir traffic webinars
    Flir Traficon Academy is organising several informative webinars for November, to provide participants with more about keeping traffic flowing. The vehicle and bicycle presence detector on 5 November at 7:00am, 1:30pm and 6:30pm will discuss the Flir ThermiCam/TrafiSense integrated thermal camera and detector that can be used for vehicle and bike detection, which uses thermal energy emitted from vehicles and bicyclists to detect their presence
  • March 8, 2019
    London Science Museum hosts free driverless vehicle exhibition
    Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are at the heart of a new exhibition at the London Science Museum. Driverless: Who is in control? opens on 12 June and looks at “how close we are to living in a world driven by thinking machines”. Continuing until October 2020, the show examines themes familiar to ITS professionals wrestling with the legal, ethical and logistical issues around the introduction of driverless cars to public roads. The museum says it will focus on “how much of this seemingly futuristic technolog
  • March 11, 2019
    British Safety Council launches app for measuring air pollution in London
    The British Safety Council (BSC) and Kings College London have launched an app for outdoor workers to measure exposure to air pollution – an increasing preoccupation for the ITS industry. The Canairy app could help improve workzone safety by providing employees, and their bosses, with information to help them reduce exposure to air pollution. The app is being launched as part of the BSC’s ‘Time to Breathe’ campaign, which seeks to encourage companies, policymakers and regulators to take the risks of