Mrs Sheryll Murray (in the Chair) We begin with the Select
Committee statement. Dame Meg Hillier will speak on the publication
of the 22nd report of the Public Accounts Committee, “Tackling
local air quality breaches”, for up to 10 minutes, during which no
interventions may be taken. At the conclusion of Dame Meg Hillier’s
statement, I will call Members to put questions on the subject of
the statement, and call Dame Meg Hillier to respond to them in
turn. Questions...Request free trial
(in the Chair)
We begin with the Select Committee statement. Dame will speak on the publication of the 22nd report of
the Public Accounts Committee, “Tackling local air quality
breaches”, for up to 10 minutes, during which no interventions
may be taken. At the conclusion of Dame Meg Hillier’s statement,
I will call Members to put questions on the subject of the
statement, and call Dame to respond to them in turn. Questions should be
brief. I call the Chair of the Public Accounts Committee.
Dame (Hackney South and Shoreditch) (Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Murray. I
record my thanks to the National Audit Office and the Public
Accounts Committee for this report. As many Members will know,
the National Audit Office does great work to support us,
analysing the numbers from Government and making sure that we are
working on the basis of the facts in front of us. I record a
special thanks to my deputy Chair, the hon. Member for The
Cotswolds ( ), who chaired this
particular session of the Committee’s work. We also took evidence
from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs—it is
good to see the Minister in her place—the Department for
Transport, and National Highways on their work to tackle air
quality in England. Our report covers the nitrogen dioxide
programme and work to address other air pollutants.
The Committee was particularly keen that we make a statement on
this report in the House because of the vital importance of the
issue. Quite simply, poor air quality can cause significant
damage to people’s health, as well as harming the environment.
There is some good news: emissions of most air pollutants have
been falling in recent decades in the UK. However, poor air
quality continues to cause damage to people’s health and the
natural environment. As we highlight in our report, the Committee
on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants estimated that
human-made air pollution in the UK has an effect equivalent to
between 28,000 and 36,000 deaths each year. Of course, there was
the very tragic case of a young girl who died, where the coroner
concluded that her asthma had been exacerbated by the pollution
around the south circular in south London.
There are two types of air quality target in the UK: national
emissions ceilings, which are breached if too much of one
pollutant is emitted across the UK within a year, and local
concentration limits—about which I think most Members get the
most letters—which are breached if the average level of a
pollutant in a specific area is too high. Current national
targets cover pollution from ammonia, particulate matter,
nitrogen oxides, non-methane volatile organic compounds and
sulphur dioxide, as well as others. Between 2010 and 2019, the UK
complied with most of its legal air quality limits for major
pollutants at local and national levels, with the exception of
the nitrogen dioxide annual mean concentration limit, of which
there have been long-standing breaches. The Committee was
particularly concerned about those breaches, and the report
reflects that concern.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the
Department for Transport helpfully established the Joint Air
Quality Unit in 2016 to oversee delivery of the Government’s
plans to achieve compliance with air quality targets. Measures to
tackle nitrogen dioxide pollution include bus retrofit and
traffic management schemes and, in some areas, clean air zones
where vehicle owners are required to pay a charge if their
vehicle does not meet a certain emissions standard. Through their
nitrogen dioxide programme, the Government have directed 64 local
authorities to take action to improve air quality. They have also
commissioned National Highways to examine breaches on the
strategic road network in England. I should say that across that
network, only a total of about 51 miles has actually breached
that limit across 31 local areas. Air pollution is often very
localised, and only about 250 homes are directly affected by that
air pollution, because it dissipates. However, one of the
challenges is how to measure it, and I will touch on that
challenge in a moment, because the Committee is concerned that
the Government need to look at the model for measurement as we go
forward.
As of May this year, a lifetime budget of £883 million has been
committed to the programme to support local councils, and the
Government separately spent £39 million to improve air quality on
the strategic road network between 2015-16 and 2019-20. The
Government published a clean air strategy in January 2019,
outlining their approach to air quality much more broadly. At the
time, we took evidence from the Government, and they have since
published their air pollution control programme to make sure that
the 2030 targets are met.
However, the Committee concludes that current policy measures are
insufficient to meet four of the five 2030 emission ceiling
targets set for the UK as a whole. There has been progress, but
there is still a lot to do. Progress to address illegal levels of
nitrogen dioxide pollution in the 64 authorities and 31 sections
of the strategic road network, which I mentioned, has been slower
than was expected in 2017. Central Government had expected that
there would be a change within three years, but as of 1 April
this year, 17 local authorities were still in the process of
implementing measures. It has been four and a half years since
the target was set, and most of those 17 authorities do not have
a firm completion date, although eventual compliance is expected
because of the Government’s moves to introduce electric vehicles
and other upgrades to vehicles. However, we have separately
looked at the electric vehicle programme, and there are
challenges there too.
One of the main conclusions of our report is that the public find
it hard to find information about air quality in their area, and
it is difficult to know what has been done by either central
Government or local government to address illegal levels of
pollution. We conclude—I do not think it is rocket science—that
air quality issues require local government and the national
Government to work very closely together, yet we do not think
that the Government have quite got the balance right. The lack of
a co-ordinated central communications campaign means that
activities by local councils are not always supported by a strong
national message about the need for air quality measures. For
example, low emission zones can be unpopular locally but are
vital. Often, it is about the Government saying, “You need to
take measures in order to reduce emissions,” but when measures
are taken, they are not always backed up by the national message.
National messaging can also help to make sure that people know
how they can be affected by air quality breaches and how they can
take mitigating action, especially if they have respiratory
problems, because that obviously has a very big impact on their
health.
Of course, as the Public Accounts Committee, we are very
concerned about value for money, and we would like the Government
to look at how money is being spent across Whitehall on air
pollution issues. We know it is difficult to get a precise
figure, but we think it important that DEFRA takes a lead and
nudges or pushes other Departments to identify in their budget
what they are spending, so that we can all see that, DEFRA will
be able to see that and, crucially, Departments can be held to
account to make sure that they are doing their bit to tackle air
pollution in the UK.
I will not go through every recommendation in detail, but the
issue of information is worth highlighting. The Government’s main
source of public information on air quality is the UK AIR
website, but this is impenetrable for the average user if they
want to find out information about their local area, and it does
not present very clear information on the legal limits for each
pollutant. It needs to be looked at again, and I hope that the
Minister hears this and will feed it back to the Department. We
really believe in transparency—not just the Public Accounts
Committee, but all Members of the House—and it needs to be pushed
through, because the best group of people to help us tackle air
pollution can be local people, who have a real interest in the
issue and who need to be able to see what is going on. They can
also adapt their behaviour, perhaps by travelling less and
thinking about not using cars on short journeys, in order to
tackle pollution in their area.
One of the other issues is the national model that the Government
use to identify areas that are likely to breach air quality
limits. They use that information to direct councils to take
action, but the national model does not directly use the results
of monitoring by local authorities. Instead, there is a national
network of monitoring stations, which is a good thing, but there
are obviously gaps—they are not everywhere—and the Government
have to use that for the national model. Some local authorities
have raised with the Committee their concerns that this may
result in an unfair situation, whereby councils with high levels
of nitrogen dioxide pollution are not required to take action
because the national model did not predict a breach. It sounds
quite technical, but it is actually about local government and
the national Government working closely together, having a good
look at the model, and making sure that the uncertainty in the
model is highlighted.
The Committee is clear that local authorities have a key role to
play. As I said, they have the freedom to set different exemption
criteria and different charging levels for clean air zones and so
forth, but the joint air quality unit at Government level has
been a bit inflexible and lacks understanding of local politics,
with too much emphasis often placed on clean air zones as the
default option, instead of measures that may be more suited to
the area. I am a great believer in local communities deciding as
much as possible for themselves, while Government have an
overarching view and challenge where there is a failure at local
level. There is a will in local government to deal with this and
we need to see a better way of working between local and national
government. I hope that is landing with the Minister.
We have recommended introducing a national communications
campaign on air quality to provide a strong national message
about how we can all change our behaviour and the purpose of
those measures to support us all in staying healthy and keeping
the air clean in our areas. We have also recommended ensuring
that councils have sufficient flexibility to determine the
approach in their area. In summary, we have seen some progress,
but there is a lot to do. If the Government take their foot off
the pedal, we would very concerned. The impact of not tackling
air quality is not something we can contemplate The bones of
action are there but there needs to better working together. That
is the summary of our report.
(Exeter) (Lab)
Did the Committee arrive at an overall ballpark figure as to the
cost to society as a whole from air pollution? I think you,
Chair, and I were on an unprecedented joint transport, local
government and environmental committee two or three years back
that looked into air pollution and I think we arrived at a figure
in the ballpark of £20 billion a year in terms of health and
other costs to the country. Those figures are always quite
useful, as I am sure my hon. Friend the Member for Hackney South
and Shoreditch (Dame ) agrees, when making arguments for the Treasury about
the cost-benefit of taking real, meaningful action on an issue
such as air pollution.
Dame
I thank my right hon. Friend for his question. The National Audit
Office has looked into that in detail. I do not have a figure to
hand, but he is right. All these measures have an important role
in health prevention, which plays a hugely important role in the
cost. NHS spending was just over 40% of the resource spending of
all Whitehall Departments. When we think of it like that, there
is a clear incentive for Government to work together to tackle
things such as air pollution to try and reduce health problems
and health inequalities, which will also have an impact on an
already massively overstretched NHS budget.
|