Note that the *only* "dangerously high" readings were obtained in London underground where only *electric* trains run.
One of the worst aspects of the web is the way it's polluted with idiots like this, giving wholly misleading information to promote a personal agenda, in this case his anti e-car agenda.
The nature of the pollution in the London Underground system is entirely different from that above ground so is not comparable. It's exacerbated by the system's old design who never provided for adequate air conditioning and filtration. Underground it's the brake dust particulates that dominate, above ground those are insignificant compared to the exhaust gas pollutants.
And he is wrong to claim that the only dangerously high levels were in the Underground system. London has long had many dangerously high zones of traffic pollution, even in my own fringe borough adjacent to the Surrey countryside there are zones that have resulted in EU fines for breaching danger levels. Those and others like them are precisely why we are getting the ULEZ zone controls.
The problem isn't imaginary, the data shows that several thousands in London die prematurely each year from air pollution and London is the only place I know of there are coroners findings, on the evidence, of childrens deaths definitely due to traffic air pollution. Killing children to satisfy the cravings of fanatical petrolheads is never going to be acceptable.
And of course the idiocy of the petrolheads campaigning is that they imagine they can stop the adoption of electric vehicles in place of i.c. ones. That is long lost battle:
There are now over 1.2 million plug in electric cars in the UK, numbers growing exponentially.
At the end of 2016 just 0.4% of all new vehicles registered were electric, by 2022 this had risen to 16.6% of new car registrations. A further 6.3% of all new cars registered were plug-in hybrids, making the total market share for new cars registered in 2022 with a plug-in 22.9%.
By the end of this year a quarter of our car sales will be plug-in, and that expanding exponentially. There's similar rapid growth in the adoption of electric vans. All over this country electric buses are being adopted, nowhere more spectacularly than here in London where we now only buy zero emission buses, battery electric for most routes and hydrogen fuel cell for the few longer routes. We now have major truck manufacturers like Volvo and Renault offering ranges of e-trucks from 7.5 tonnes to 40 tonne capable tractor units for Artics
Nor are we alone, some are far ahead of us. Over six years ago Norway's new car registrations exceeded 50% electric and their entire national car fleet is now 86.8% electric, spelling out the imminent death of i.c. cars there.
In Denmark they are far advanced in using e-car owners batteries to support the grid, V to G being something being planned for many countries, including the UK, as part of tackling climate change.
Those who think all this can be stopped by online protests are out of their tiny minds.
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