Barcelona bans most polluting cars

Discussion in 'General' started by silversod, Jan 30, 2020.

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  1. The net is tightening on older polluting ICE vehicles which will impact 50000 vehicles/day :eek:

    https://info.viamichelin.com/news/barcelona-bans-older-most-polluting-cars?vm_uid=2817056&ns_mchannel=Email&ns_source=email_client&ns_linkname=txt_AT3_Actu_BarcelonePollution&ns_campaign=DM102567
    - 28/01/2020

    "Barcelona imposed a ban Thursday on older, more polluting vehicles during most of the day in a bid to reduce air pollution in Spain's second largest city.

    "Gasoline-powered cars registered in Spain before 2000, and diesel-powered cars registered before 2006 are now banned from most city streets on weekdays between 7:00 am and 8:00 pm and face a fine of at least 100 euros ($112) if they violate the rule.

    All banned vehicles will be allowed to enter the city 10 times a year.

    Owners of vehicles registered outside of Spain can request permission from city hall to drive in the Mediterranean coastal city which is home to 1.6 million people.

    Beginning in 2021 older, more polluting vans, trucks and buses will also be banned..

    The new rules are expected to affect around 50,000 vehicles a day and lead to a 15-percent cut in nitrogen dioxide emissions, a poisonous gas in car exhaust.

    Since last year, Madrid has restricted driving in the old city centre to people who live there. Residents from outside the area can only drive there if they use an electric or other low-emissions vehicle.

    While that rule is more restrictive than the policy put in place in Barcelona, the area of Madrid that is affected is much smaller.

    Barcelona's far-left mayor Ada Colau has raised the possibility of introducing a congestion charge like those in place in other European cities such as London, Stockholm and Milan.

    Barcelona has since 2002 exceeded the level of airborne carbon dioxide set by the European Union, according to a 2017 report by the city public health department.

    The city's poor air quality caused a yearly average of 424 premature deaths between 2010 and 2017, the report said.

    Last year Brussels asked the European Union's Court of Justice to take action against Spain for its "systemic violations" of rules limiting nitrogen dioxide emissions."
     
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  3. Wow, I wonder how it the Spanish people actually deal with that. My experience with Spanish drivers was that the law is just a hint on how things work, but I have to admit that was about 20 years ago.
     
    silversod likes this.
  4. Yeah I know what you mean about Spanish drivers lol. The thing is they're so far behind (as well as a host of other EU countries) on their Paris accord commitments that the Spanish government have to crack down on emissions.
    Here in the UK it's the same, Every local authority in the land has been told by the government to crack down on polluting older vehicles too & bring in CAZ (clean air zones) etc.
     
    Esprit1st likes this.

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