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Live blog: Keeping kids safe the American way, running coach causes collision on running track (on his bike), Pontiff blags a Giro VIP pass, Dave Brailsford on Strava + more

All the news and views from the site and beyond
 

Arriving at road.cc in 2017 via 220 Triathlon Magazine, Jack dipped his toe in most jobs on the site and over at eBikeTips before being named the new editor of road.cc in 2020, much to his surprise. His cycling life began during his students days, when he cobbled together a few hundred quid off the back of a hard winter selling hats (long story) and bought his first road bike - a Trek 1.1 that was quickly relegated to winter steed, before it was sadly pinched a few years later. Creatively replacing it with a Trek 1.2, Jack mostly rides this bike around local cycle paths nowadays, but when he wants to get the racer out and be competitive his preferred events are time trials, sportives, triathlons and pogo sticking - the latter being another long story.  

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23 comments

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hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
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Just seen that the UK is being taken to court by the EU over the air quality 'apathy'.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/britain-government-eu-cou...

And yes, they are quoting the zombie 40,000 figure.

Edit: The Grauniad is covering this too:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/may/17/uk-taken-to-europes-...

although they are using a figure of 23,500 early deaths due to NO2.

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Joeinpoole | 5 years ago
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On the subject of historical air pollution in London this report is well worth a read to give context to today's issues.

London's air pollution, measured in 'suspended particle matter' (SPM), which is the stuff that does the damage, was about 30x worse in 1900 than it is today. By contrast Dehli's air pollution today is about 25x worse than that in London.

https://ourworldindata.org/london-air-pollution

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ChrisB200SX | 5 years ago
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Shouldn't ride a bike on an athletics track, but definitely idiotic to be ambling around in the inside lanes (especially without regularly checking if anyone is coming up behind you).

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cqexbesd replied to ChrisB200SX | 5 years ago
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ChrisB200SX wrote:

Shouldn't ride a bike on an athletics track, 

I assume he is pacing the runners (not that means he shouldn't be keeping an eye out as well but at least he probably has a legitimate reason for cycling where he is - assuming pacing is an accepted training technique - I couldn't run for a bus)

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brooksby | 5 years ago
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Quote:

What do you think of their advice?

That there's fightin' talk!

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rkemb | 5 years ago
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Quote:

the Government wants to know what you think will make our roads safer for cycling

And to follow up the other comments, what, again? How often does the government need to collect information on this issue before it does anything? This is at least the third call of this type I've come across in the last few years.

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brooksby replied to rkemb | 5 years ago
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rkemb wrote:

Quote:

the Government wants to know what you think will make our roads safer for cycling

And to follow up the other comments, what, again? How often does the government need to collect information on this issue before it does anything? This is at least the third call of this type I've come across in the last few years.

IIRC they still haven't done the review promised back in 2012...

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BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
9 likes

You can tell government all you want but they won't/don't listen or action anything, ONE fucking over the top bias case involving a person on a bike and a 'poor' woman who was "mowed down" and they go into overdrive to get the knives out to punish, yet ignore the deaths of people on bikes every single week and the 7 serious injuries every day, most of which are at fault motorists.

In fact they go in to victim blaming mode with their cack about left turning LGVs and publish video's to increase the blame culture, add on plastic hat and hi-vis promotion and it's clear they're a bunch of scraggy c####s the lot of them.

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brooksby replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
2 likes

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

You can tell government all you want but they won't/don't listen or action anything, ONE fucking over the top bias case involving a person on a bike and a 'poor' woman who was "mowed down" and they go into overdrive to get the knives out to punish, yet ignore the deaths of people on bikes every single week and the 7 serious injuries every day, most of which are at fault motorists.

In fact they go in to victim blaming mode with their cack about left turning LGVs and publish video's to increase the blame culture, add on plastic hat and hi-vis promotion and it's clear they're a bunch of scraggy c####s the lot of them.

Don't hold back, BTBS - tell us how you really feel! yes yes 

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hawkinspeter replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
3 likes

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

You can tell government all you want but they won't/don't listen or action anything, ONE fucking over the top bias case involving a person on a bike and a 'poor' woman who was "mowed down" and they go into overdrive to get the knives out to punish, yet ignore the deaths of people on bikes every single week and the 7 serious injuries every day, most of which are at fault motorists.

In fact they go in to victim blaming mode with their cack about left turning LGVs and publish video's to increase the blame culture, add on plastic hat and hi-vis promotion and it's clear they're a bunch of scraggy c####s the lot of them.

You've missed out the 40,000 people dying each year due to poor air quality in the UK.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
4 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

You can tell government all you want but they won't/don't listen or action anything, ONE fucking over the top bias case involving a person on a bike and a 'poor' woman who was "mowed down" and they go into overdrive to get the knives out to punish, yet ignore the deaths of people on bikes every single week and the 7 serious injuries every day, most of which are at fault motorists.

In fact they go in to victim blaming mode with their cack about left turning LGVs and publish video's to increase the blame culture, add on plastic hat and hi-vis promotion and it's clear they're a bunch of scraggy c####s the lot of them.

You've missed out the 40,000 people dying each year due to poor air quality in the UK.

Aye but the report is about cycling safety, as in on the road, I know that knocking on the head motoring use and other aspects in our lives can reduce the deaths/ailments suffered but this is focussing solely on road safety, well allegedly.

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brooksby replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
1 like

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

Aye but the report is about cycling safety, as in on the road, I know that knocking on the head motoring use and other aspects in our lives can reduce the deaths/ailments suffered but this is focussing solely on road safety, well allegedly.

And that's the problem: the powers that be really (probably) couldn't care less about cycling safety - they want to restrict cycling (I believe) so as to smooth the passage for the introduction of self-driving cars.

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Miller replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

And that's the problem: the powers that be really (probably) couldn't care less about cycling safety - they want to restrict cycling (I believe) so as to smooth the passage for the introduction of self-driving cars.

What you say may well be true but I suspect that self-driving cars are MUCH further away than the hype would have you believe. They might - might - become a thing on easy roads like motorways with well marked and predictable lanes but on shared-use urban roads a self-driving vehicle will be a much more difficult proposition. Not only that, the necessary sensors and computing are going to be expensive and that will hinder mass uptake.

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Mark B replied to Miller | 5 years ago
1 like

Miller wrote:

brooksby wrote:

And that's the problem: the powers that be really (probably) couldn't care less about cycling safety - they want to restrict cycling (I believe) so as to smooth the passage for the introduction of self-driving cars.

What you say may well be true but I suspect that self-driving cars are MUCH further away than the hype would have you believe. They might - might - become a thing on easy roads like motorways with well marked and predictable lanes but on shared-use urban roads a self-driving vehicle will be a much more difficult proposition. Not only that, the necessary sensors and computing are going to be expensive and that will hinder mass uptake.

Well yes... and so it would be much easier to convert urban roads into easy roads by banning bikes and introducing jaywalking laws.

I don't believe this is actually what the powers that be want, yet. I would be surprised if Google etc are admitting failure yet, even in behind-the-scenes lobbying.

But it's a risk to be aware of for the future, certainly. Indeed, if self-driving cars that can safely mix with bicycles continue to be elusive, I can imagine there being a referendum: would you rather have self-driving cars banned and bikes allowed as now, or vice versa? And I fear we would lose that.

 

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hawkinspeter replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
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BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

You can tell government all you want but they won't/don't listen or action anything, ONE fucking over the top bias case involving a person on a bike and a 'poor' woman who was "mowed down" and they go into overdrive to get the knives out to punish, yet ignore the deaths of people on bikes every single week and the 7 serious injuries every day, most of which are at fault motorists.

In fact they go in to victim blaming mode with their cack about left turning LGVs and publish video's to increase the blame culture, add on plastic hat and hi-vis promotion and it's clear they're a bunch of scraggy c####s the lot of them.

You've missed out the 40,000 people dying each year due to poor air quality in the UK.

Aye but the report is about cycling safety, as in on the road, I know that knocking on the head motoring use and other aspects in our lives can reduce the deaths/ailments suffered but this is focussing solely on road safety, well allegedly.

In my mind, pollution caused by vehicles should be considered as part of road safety. If vehicles on the road are doing something that ends up shortening people's lives, then I'd consider it to be unsafe.

I get your point though - I just think that not enough people are up in arms about the government's failure to address the illegal pollutant levels.

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RobD replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
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hawkinspeter wrote:

In my mind, pollution caused by vehicles should be considered as part of road safety. If vehicles on the road are doing something that ends up shortening people's lives, then I'd consider it to be unsafe.

I get your point though - I just think that not enough people are up in arms about the government's failure to address the illegal pollutant levels.

At least the new MOT regulations coming in this weekend should make it stricter on diesel vehicles that churn out clouds of soot, now they just have to make sure that the tests are actually being enforced as there still seems to be far too many places people can get an MOT signed off by a slightly dodgy garage, or they just don't bother getting it tested at all.

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Joeinpoole replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

You've missed out the 40,000 people dying each year due to poor air quality in the UK.

... except that it not actually true. 

I've read it's been described as  a "zombie fact" by a senior respiratory consultant. When such a 'fact' gets on the internet then it can never, ever be killed. It just keeps getting regurgitated by ill-informed folk like Sadik Khan (and yourself).

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-39129270

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hawkinspeter replied to Joeinpoole | 5 years ago
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Joeinpoole wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

You've missed out the 40,000 people dying each year due to poor air quality in the UK.

... except that it not actually true. 

I've read it's been described as  a "zombie fact" by a senior respiratory consultant. When such a 'fact' gets on the internet then it can never, ever be killed. It just keeps getting regurgitated by ill-informed folk like Sadik Khan (and yourself).

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-39129270

Thanks - I just googled for a figure and accepted the figure as it had been quoted on the BBC and Guardian websites amongst others.

So, the question remains, how many early deaths in the UK are caused by poor air quality? Does anyone know?

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rkemb replied to Joeinpoole | 5 years ago
2 likes

Joeinpoole wrote:

... except that it not actually true. 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-39129270

The article you link indicates that the figure is a statistical estimate, sure, but not that it's untrue.

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hawkinspeter replied to rkemb | 5 years ago
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rkemb wrote:

Joeinpoole wrote:

... except that it not actually true. 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-39129270

The article you link indicates that the figure is a statistical estimate, sure, but not that it's untrue.

Here's a GreenPeace article discussing the figures: https://unearthed.greenpeace.org/2017/03/06/air-pollution-cause-40000-de...

TLDR: no-one really agrees on a number.

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rkemb replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
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hawkinspeter wrote:

Here's a GreenPeace article discussing the figures: https://unearthed.greenpeace.org/2017/03/06/air-pollution-cause-40000-de...

TLDR: no-one really agrees on a number.

THat says much the same thing: there's a statistical model covering the number of premature deaths attributable to air pollution. The issue with the 40,000 number is that it's bad communication of what that statistical model tells us, which is about shortening of life, not that "air pollution isn't that bad".

hawkinspeter wrote:

TLDR: no-one really agrees on a number.

And... that doesn't mean that the number's wrong and can be airily dismissed either. It just needs caveats.

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davel replied to rkemb | 5 years ago
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rkemb wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

TLDR: no-one really agrees on a number.

And... that doesn't mean that the number's wrong and can be airily dismissed either. It just needs caveats.

Exactly... probably between 5,000 and 60,000.

Could be 20,000ish, could be 40,000ish.

It's in the ballpark, and a big number.

Does Joe's 'zombie fact' respiratory expert have some actual quotes or original research on this, or are they too busy sunning themselves in their Road Haulage Association-sponsored conservatory?

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Joeinpoole replied to davel | 5 years ago
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davel wrote:

rkemb wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

TLDR: no-one really agrees on a number.

And... that doesn't mean that the number's wrong and can be airily dismissed either. It just needs caveats.

Exactly... probably between 5,000 and 60,000.

Could be 20,000ish, could be 40,000ish.

It's in the ballpark, and a big number.

Does Joe's 'zombie fact' respiratory expert have some actual quotes or original research on this, or are they too busy sunning themselves in their Road Haulage Association-sponsored conservatory?

Here's one article reporting the Physician's observations;

"Sadiq Khan's figure on pollution deaths is a "zombie statistic and it's simply not true," according to a respiratory physician.

Figures have been released claiming pollution causes almost 40,000 premature deaths a year in the UK. Air pollution is also said to cause a total 340,000 years of lost life in the UK.

Figures originated from a Royal College of Physicians report and Mr Khan has cited the figures in announcing measures to cut pollution in London.

But Tony Frew, respiratory physician at the University of Brighton, told Julia Hartley-Brewer this is merely an example of a "zombie statistic", meaning "however much you try to kill it it comes back and it's simply not true."

He explained that the 340,000 life years figure doesn't equate to real life, and in reality each person loses only about three days from their lifespan as a result of pollution.

Frew also said that the 40,000 deaths a year figure is "a guess" using information about two pollutants which overlap.

He added that pollution levels are "illegal because we made it illegal, not because it's dangerous." 

 

http://talkradio.co.uk/news/sadiq-khans-40000-pollution-deaths-year-zomb...

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