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

  • June 28, 2019
    ASTC to operate e-bus service in India
    The Assam State Transport Corporation (ASTC) is to deploy 15 electric buses in Guwahati, a city in north-east India. The project is part of the Indian government’s FAME (Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles) scheme. A report by Business Standard says each bus will carry up to 31 passengers along a 6.4km route between the neighbourhoods of Kachari and Kamakhya. ASTC will operate a second service along a 38km route from the Inter State Bus Terminal while also running another service in
  • February 14, 2018
    SwRI sponsors ITS America with $1,000 student essay competition
    Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) is inviting U.S. students to take part in an essay competition to share their visions for the future of transportation with a $1,000 (£720) prize and a trip to ITS America 2018, in Detroit, from the 4-7 June. It is aimed at providing students an opportunity to apply their knowledge in a thought-provoking manner. The topic, ‘How do you envision disruptive consumer technology will affect transportation systems over the next 10 years?’ is open to transportation, engineering
  • April 1, 2019
    ChargePoint to provide EV chargers at Morrisons stores
    ChargePoint Services is to install its GeniePoint Network electric vehicle (EV) chargers across all Morrisons supermarkets in the UK. ChargePoint says its 50-100kW rapid chargers will allow customers to refuel their EV in around 20 minutes. The firm’s managing director Alex Bamberg says: “By offering another useful local service, customers are provided with choice for grocery, café and comfort stops, and green vehicle refuelling.” The first chargers will be running by the end of this month and 100 are e
  • March 9, 2018
    C-roads will soon be ‘a reality’
    Cross-border C-ITS-enabled roads (C-roads) will start becoming a reality in 2019, with safety as the driver, according to AustriaTech/ITS Austria's Martin Bohm. He made the comment during a recent Brussels workshop run by the European ITS and C-roads platforms to assess results of road corridor pilots. The latter is a joint initiative by EU member states and road operators to test and implement C-ITS services for universal harmonisation and interoperability. We can, he continued, deploy systems