The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, and his agency Transport for London (TfL) has announced a so called Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) in central London from 8 April 2019 (https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/driving/ultra-low-emission-zone). The stated aim of this ULEZ is to help improve air quality. A number of cities around the world are planning similar things, but London’s is one of the first with such stringent requirements.
The London ULEZ is being implemented in two phases; the first from 8 April 2019 covers the area where the London Congestion Charge is currently implemented, a small part of central London with relatively few permanent residents. From 25 October 2021 the scheme will be implemented across a much larger area – that enclosed by the North and South circular roads – effectively ring roads encircling large parts of suburban London. The total area enclosed by the 2021 zone will be 123 sq. miles and over 3,250,000 people live in this area – these two areas are shown in Figure 1. If a vehicle does not meet a certain emissions standard, it will need to pay a daily charge to enter the zone, currently £12.50 for vans, cars, and motorcycles and £100 for lorries/trucks over 5 tons.
The London ULEZ attracted my attention not so much for what it does regulate, but for what it does not. Peculiarly it specifies the following emissions standards for vehicles:
Euro 3 (2007) for motorcycles
Euro 4 (2005) for petrol (gasoline) vehicles
Euro 6 (2014) for diesel vehicles
Euro VI (2013) for lorries (trucks) & buses and other heavy duty (on-road) vehicles
Are these the appropriate technology levels? These emissions standards mean that the following emissions from vehicles in the London ULEZ will be legal:
The result is that motorbikes and petrol (gasoline) vehicles will legally be able to emit unlimited levels of particulate matter emissions inside the London ULEZ as these are unregulated in Euro 3 and 4 respectively.
Since the VW “dieselgate” scandal, the media discourse in the UK has rightly focused heavily on air pollution. However, discussions of air pollution in the media often use NOx alone as a surrogate. NOx is hardly the only pollutant from vehicles however; CO, unburned hydrocarbons, ammonia, and particulates (soot) are all emitted as well.
CO2 is also emitted of course; typically a petrol/gasoline car emits around 15% more CO2 than its diesel equivalent. However, CO2, whilst being an important greenhouse gas contributing to climate change, it is not typically regarded as a pollutant in an air quality sense. This is because it is not currently thought to have a significant short term impact on human health and so for that reason is not considered in urban air quality legislation.
I am often told that air pollution (NOx) kills 40,000 people each year in the UK. The University of Cambridge's Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communication digs into the data and tells us something quite different (https://wintoncentre.maths.cam.ac.uk/news/does-air-pollution-kill-40000-people-each-year-uk). Even accepting that 40,000 figure, it breaks down to 23,500 deaths attributable to NOx and 29,000 to PM2.5 (a common measure of particulate emissions). Therefore the data tells us that particulate emissions are more harmful to human health than NOx, but the London ULEZ will allow unlimited levels of particulate emissions from petrol cars and motorbikes. This does not sound right to me.
Could this really happen?
It is important to understand whether this is a purely hypothetical problem, or one that is likely to occur in practice. In order to investigate this I found data from 62 vehicles, all of which will be legal in the ULEZ (30 petrol, 19 diesel, and 13 motorcycle) and looked at their particulate matter emissions (my sources are all identified at the end of this article). In particular I focused on a type of petrol engine know as Gasoline Direct Injection (GDI) which is now the dominant gasoline technology in the market as it lowers CO2 emissions, but is known to have higher levels of particulate matter emissions. This is shown in Figure 3 which shows the measured particulate matter emissions from these 62 vehicles, presented as the mean (average) alongside the maximum and minimum values observed.
Figure 3 clearly shows that GDI vehicles and motorcycles will emit high levels of particulate matter emissions, with Diesel vehicles showing near-zero emissions. The reality is not quite like this, and a rescaling of Figure 3 with a logarithmic ordinate (y-axis) is shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4 shows that the Diesel particulate matter emissions are not zero, but are about 100 times smaller than the GDI and motorcycles on average. This means that in the ULEZ on average one GDI vehicle will emit the same particulate matter emissions as 100 diesels. This is not surprising since particulate matter emissions from diesels have been regulated since Euro 5 (2011) and almost all diesel vehicles are fitted with Diesel Particulate Filters (DPFs) to eliminate PM emissions. Clearly these DPFs are very effective.
I have repeated this exercise for Carbon Monoxide (CO) emissions. CO is toxic (in high concentrations it has been known to kill people directly e.g. as a result of faulty domestic boilers) and although dilute in the atmosphere, local emissions can still have an impact. This is shown in Figure 5. In this case the CO emissions from diesel really are near-zero with the average petrol vehicle emitting around 40 times more CO than a diesel, and motorbikes around 50 times more.
TfL themselves in their literature encourage people to replace a Euro 5 diesel vehicle (which will be fitted with a DPF) with a Euro 4 or 5 petrol vehicle in order to comply with the zone and reduce emissions. Such an approach will reduce NOx emissions, but may well increase particulate matter emissions.
TfL admit that the ULEZ will do little to PM emissions, stating:
“In Greater London in 2020 and 2025, cars are predicted to make up over 60 per cent of road transport related PM2.5 emissions, with cars and vans still estimated to be contributing about 75 per cent of road transport emissions.”
It is also worth noting that TfL as a result of the ULEZ expect:
“CO2 emissions from larger vehicles such as buses and HGVs are predicted to increase”
This is insane, a heavily marketed ULEZ leading to an increase in PM and CO2 emissions is not a low emissions zone. It is a low NOx zone, which will reduce NOx levels inside the zone, which is obviously a benefit, however the complete ignoring of particulates is crazy. Particularly given that PM emissions are more harmful to human health. It is in effect an HPZ – a High Politics Zone!
I would suggest all vehicles be subject to Euro 6, in which case the emissions would be as in Figure 6:
It should not pass unmentioned that the Euro standards on which the ULEZ is based are not necessarily reflective of real-driving emissions and have been subject to so called cycle beating (at its worst, illegally by VW during dieselgate). Such a discussion is outside the scope of this article, but for a good analysis of real emissions look to Emissions Analytics EQUA index - https://equaindex.com/equa-air-quality-index/.
To summarise, the TfL ULEZ will reduce NOx emissions, but may well increase particulate matter and CO2 emissions. It is designed to penalise drivers of diesel vehicles. As a result it is not a ULEZ, but an HPZ – a High Politics Zone! The continued demonisation of diesel as typified by the ULEZ is not helpful, rather it is likely to either increase non-NOx emissions or at best reduce the rate of emissions reduction.
Data from:
doi:10.4271/2010-01-0786; doi:10.4271/2011-01-1219; doi:10.4271/2012-01-0144; doi:10.4271/2011-01-1212; doi:10.4271/2011-01-1224; doi:10.4271/2009-01-1841; doi:10.4271/2003-01-1888; doi:10.1007/s12239−014−0109−4; http://www.cambridgeparticlemeeting.org/sites/default/files/Presentations/2009/JAndersson(Ricardo)_2009_GDI_PM.pdf
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