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Bandcamp
He completely ignored this by saying "it's a consultation not a Referendum "
So what was the point holding it ?
As my wife says to me " Why ask me , you'll do what you want anyway "
He then said that the 82 % objection was from 'vested interests ' .........No shit , vested interests like the OP and millions of others who have to work and live here .
Vile little Snake ........gone soon I hope .
What do I get for it?
It's a non-job. We functioned perfectly well without having some puffed-up self-important gnome who's only there to take credit for good things. All the other stuff is someone else's fault. He costs a fortune and is poor value for money.
That cannot be overlooked.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
Khan is a twat. Makes me (almost) yearn for Ken Livingstone.
https://www.idealhome.co.uk/house-manual/home-energy/government-wood-burning-stove-regulations-pound300-fine
The stats are probably a bit misleading in the way they are presented in that article though. When they say that wood burners are the largest source of small particulates, that doesn't take account of local variations. In rural areas a lot of people have wood burners as they have readily available cheap (sometimes free) wood, and have space to store it. In London very few people have wood burners. Transport is the biggest source of particulate emissions in London.
That's another stat I'd be careful with. NOx is reducing for a variety of reasons. I'm seeing a lot more hybrid and electric cars on the road than I used to. That will reduce NOx. Newer petrol and diesel cars are better than old ones on NOx as well.
I'm also seeing a lot more bikes on the road where I live. I suspect that is more driven by wanting to get around more quickly and by petrol and diesel costs than the ULEZ though. If I look at our street, I cycle most of my journeys. I see the neighbours both sides of me out on bikes. The same for the family the other side of the road. We all own ULEZ compliant cars.
What have NOx emissions done in other UK cities during the same time period. That's not a perfect control, as there has been a bigger uptake of cycling in London, but it will give some kind of baseline. I suspect that the 44% figures is largely from Sadiq Khan's marketing people crediting the ULEZ for trends that were happening anyway.
Like I said above, the big problem the ULEZ isn't addressing is particulates. Tyre and brake wear is a much bigger source of particulates than exhausts. Electric cars won't help much there, if they help at all. They are heavier and will give off more particulates from their tyres. Regen braking might offset that a bit if they driven sensibly, but there is a lot more material wearing away from your tyres than your brake pads.
We have to get people out of their cars, and the ULEZ is only going to make a marginal difference on that.
It's not just London. Official figures 2 or 3 years ago were 40,000 premature deaths per year across the UK because of air pollution. It might be slightly better now, but it's still a big problem.
Like I said in my first post in this thread, the big problem is total lack of action by central government, and leaving it to local government (generally Labour in big cities) to make themselves unpopular. It's cynical politicians at their worst.
I'm seriously considering voting Labour at the next general election for the first time since 1992. I'd probably better leave it at that though as this thread isn't in P&E.
Good job we're ULEZ exempt!!!
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
Tradesmen ,builders, Contractors of all kinds
Appliance Repair Men
Delivery drivers
This also makes up the majority of daytime Urban traffic in London.....
The need to carry tools,plant,heavy goods means the need for work vans ......and a genuine need not just somebody who doesn't want the inconvenience of Public Transport etc or
There is no viable alternative ......there are no commercially available Vans of Transit size .....there are a few smaller electric vans but they are simply too small for most purposes (ideal for something like a locksmith maybe ) and more importantly they are far too expensive .......they are also very limited in range when hauling some weight.
It's all very well seeing the guy who has come to fit the wood floor in the lounge arrive in a £74,000 van but don't be surprised when he says he charges £600 per day because he needs to pay finance on the van that replaced £10k of Ford Transit ......
If he can get the Finance .
Ultimately all costs wash up on the shore of the end user .......not ideal when people can't pay the GAS bill .
Legitimate Trade vehicles should be exempt for lack of viable alternative.
Surely he can just add £12.50 to his invoice for properties within the zone.
As for delivery drivers, pretty much every delivery van used by all the major courier companies is ULEZ compliant. (Amazon use electric ones around here). Even if it's not ULEZ compliant, if you are making 30 deliveries per day, spreading out £12.50 across 30 deliveries isn't going to break the bank.
A lot of those objections are just whataboutery because you don't like the scheme.
The big problem is that central government won't do anything meaningful to clean the air, because they want to make Labour local authorities unpopular with those who won't see the big picture.
Trying to get a new van is a nightmare. prices are up by £10k or so for new vans, waiting times are up to a year and second hand compliant vans are rarer than Boris telling the truth.
CAZ tend to mean that people have longer journeys and so there is more pollution but i is moved to more residential areas - inner city areas are usually more financial/commercial.