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Government must "stop dithering" after High Court air pollution ruling

After a ruling the government's Air Quality Plan has failed to tackle air pollution Cycling UK is calling for a reallocation of £15bn roads fund to walking and cycling...

ClientEarth’s High Court victory over the Government’s failure to tackle illegal air pollution in the UK means the time has come to “stop dithering” and rebalance roads investment towards cycling and walking, says Cycling UK.

After an earlier victory in the Supreme Court in 2015, in which ministers were ordered to devise a plan to bring air pollution down within legal limits as soon as possible, ClientEarth, a group of activist lawyers, took the government back to High Court in a Judicial Review this November, deeming their plans “poor”.

Presiding judge, Mr Justice Garnham, ruled yesterday the government’s 2015 Air Quality Plan failed to comply with the Supreme Court ruling or relevant EU directives.

The UK government will spend £15bn on its Roads Investment Strategy over five years between 2015-2020, and just £300m until 2021 on cycling and walking, despite road traffic being one of the largest contributors to air pollution. Cycling UK says funds need to be reallocated to non-polluting forms of transport, including walking and cycling.

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“Cycling UK hopes ClientEarth’s victory will act as a wake-up call to Government that it needs to stop dithering on dirty air, and address its root causes, such as motor traffic,” said Policy Director, Roger Geffen MBE.

“Government should rebalance its spending on roads towards its long awaited Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy, which will fulfil its ambition to normalise cycling for shorter day to day journeys.”

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After 2021 spending on cycling and walking will decline to just 72p per person per year, a fraction of the recommended minimum £10 per person per head rising to £20 defined by the 2013 Get Britain Cycling report.

 

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10 comments

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P3t3 | 7 years ago
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This is a actually more important than brexit, but don't expect the government to spend much time on it.

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Dnnnnnn replied to P3t3 | 7 years ago
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P3t3 wrote:

This is a actually more important than brexit, but don't expect the government to spend much time on it.

It may be closely tied in to Brexit since the government may feel that when we leave the EU we can forget about some of the more troublesome regulations. The likes of David Davies and Liam Fox will be throwing plenty on their bonfires this weekend.

Of course, some - probably much - EU regulation will be kept. Even for some the government would like to scrap, the National Trust, CPRE et al will mobilise their formidable grey army in opposition to anything that looks like it might see another house built in the countryside. But I'm not sure how many will be up in arms about air quality...

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P3t3 replied to Dnnnnnn | 7 years ago
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Duncann wrote:

It may be closely tied in to Brexit since the government may feel that when we leave the EU we can forget about some of the more troublesome regulations. The likes of David Davies and Liam Fox will be throwing plenty on their bonfires this weekend.

Yeah, the sad thing is that if they just scrapped the EU regs very few people would bat an eyelid... There isn't really public support for clean air because it's a silent killer rather than being visible dirty black clouds. I don't really know what the answer is tbh..

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kitsunegari | 7 years ago
1 like

The government wont do anything about air pollution because it doesn't give a shit, and we voted to leave the only institution that is likely to make us do something about it.

£15Bn for cycling? Pull the other one.

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DaveE128 | 7 years ago
3 likes

Just pricing diesel cars off the road would go a long way with air pollution, but the govt isn't even willing to do that, let alone invest in cycling and walking.

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Dnnnnnn replied to DaveE128 | 7 years ago
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DaveE128 wrote:

Just pricing diesel cars off the road would go a long way with air pollution, but the govt isn't even willing to do that, let alone invest in cycling and walking.

Lots of voters drive diesel cars - that's the basic issue. You'd probably need to compensate them for making their cars very expensive to run and much less valuable in re-sale. Maybe that's the solution, or we could just force them out of the areas where pollution is at its most serious. You may then find that's it's more about vans, lorries and buses - less politically sensitive maybe but also harder to deal with from a fuel perspective. Not impossible though.

Of course, rules about diesel engine emissions are made by the EU. They haven't been as effective as they should have been thus far but we could have pushed for improvements if we'd stayed in. Now we have no say in engine and emissions regulations. We could resurrect British Leyland of course and build our own vehicles to our own specifications (which no-one else would buy).

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hawkinspeter | 7 years ago
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I'm not sure that I see the point in this. The government is supposed to represent the people (or at least the majority) and the vast majority of people that I know are perfectly happy driving around and belching out fumes (sometimes it's just their vehicles). So, why should a government try to impose rules that will simply make them unpopular?

(Disclaimer - I don't drive and I would be more then happy to see less pollution on the roads)

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tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
2 likes

Symbolic victory only really. If the government doesn't want to act, it won't act. Courts have no power to personally fine or imprison ministers for not meeting EU targets. 

I have no doubt this meeting will produce a better plan, and good on ClientEarth for sticking it to them. I also have no doubt the plan will not be implemented and that we will still miss our EU targets.

 

Just look at Edinburgh, Ayr etc. You can't even build cycle lanes. Councillors block it at the local level. The sheer hatred up here over something so innocuous will shock you lot down south. It's mental.

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bikebot replied to tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
1 like

unconstituted wrote:

Just look at Edinburgh, Ayr etc. You can't even build cycle lanes. Councillors block it at the local level. The sheer hatred up here over something so innocuous will shock you lot down south. It's mental.

 

Not that different down south, it's only a few cities that are a little softer and for London only the central area. The further from the centre the more hostile is gets, the CS11 (Regents Park) is an interesting one to watch as it sort of bridges the two.

The minihollands have had, and will continue to have their share of angry baby boomers with sharp elbows defending their parking spaces with anti-cycling protests outside town halls.

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PsiMonk replied to bikebot | 7 years ago
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bikebot wrote:

unconstituted wrote:

Just look at Edinburgh, Ayr etc. You can't even build cycle lanes. Councillors block it at the local level. The sheer hatred up here over something so innocuous will shock you lot down south. It's mental.

 

Not that different down south, it's only a few cities that are a little softer and for London only the central area. The further from the centre the more hostile is gets, the CS11 (Regents Park) is an interesting one to watch as it sort of bridges the two.

The minihollands have had, and will continue to have their share of angry baby boomers with sharp elbows defending their parking spaces with anti-cycling protests outside town halls.

 

Even central London isn't immune - CS11, Tavistock Place, East-West etc all have had organised and fierce resistance. Add in the mini-Holland experience though and the picture is actually fairly positive:
 

a) We are capable, when organised, of winning.

b) Winning establishes schemes that demonstrate in people's perceptions and evidence what we are proposing.

c) What is an issue is volunteer/campaigner resources and energy. And then skills to harness that energy - with an appropriate approach. Partly all of that does relate to cycling modal share that's already there, but there are boroughs in London with high modal share, but few active campaigners, and boroughs with very low share that have amazing campaigners. Enfield, for instance, has 0.9% modal share, is miles from central London, has deeply hostile car-culture roads, yet the campaigners there are amazing - Clare, their coordinator, just won Campaigner Of The Year at LCC's Campaigner Awards. But Roger, Adrian and others there who've been plugging away for years also deserve huge plaudits too!

In summary, wherever we try and put good stuff in, we'll face resistance. That is part of the landscape. It's how we plan, anticipate, campaign etc. that's vital.

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