With a judicial review of London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ)
expansion due to start tomorrow (Tues) *, AA research finds that
London drivers fear that being priced off the road by the £12.50
daily charge will impact on their health and safety.
Nearly two in every five (39%) of London drivers agree that being
forced to abandon their cars ‘would be such an obstacle to
being able to travel that I fear I would essentially become
marooned in my local area’. Across the UK, 62% of over-65
year olds feel this way.
Up to 300,000 car-owning London residents are expected to be
impacted by the expansion of the ULEZ to Outer London, with large
numbers of them unable to afford to buy a replacement car that
complies with the emissions standards. They are therefore being
priced off the road. Many of those were identified by the ULEZ
Impact Assessment commissioned by Transport for London as living
in deprived areas.
The same assessment showed that large areas of Outer London have
low to minimal access to public transport (page 87 of the
attached file) **.
AA research ***, which surveyed 948 Londoners among 14,668 AA
members across the UK, shows that among those London drivers
losing the use of their cars would:
-
Be a threat to their health: It would make
attending doctor or hospital appointments so difficult that it
would be bad for my health – 22% agree, It would be
such an obstacle to being able to seek the health care I need
that I consider it a threat to my wellbeing – 24% agree (47%
among over-65s across the UK).
-
Put them under a night-time curfew: Losing
my car would mean going out at night would be almost impossible
- 23% agree (38% among women across the UK).
-
Leave them feeling marooned: It would be
such an obstacle to being able to travel that I fear I would
essentially become marooned in my local area – 39% agree (62%
among over 65s across the UK).
-
Wreck family life: It would
disrupt family life to such an extent that I don't think we
could function in the way we need to – 44% agree, I or my
family would have no option but to move to somewhere that
doesn't deprive residents of their cars – 23%
agree.
-
Force them to find a new job: It would
disrupt my working life to such an extent that I would have to
find another job – 17% (57% among 18-24 year olds across the
UK).
While the ULEZ expansion faces a legal challenge this week, it is
possible that the review may decide in favour of the Mayor. In
that case, the AA suggests two measures that could greatly
relieve the impact of the ULEZ on poorer and older Londoners, and
an alternative with much greater and longer-term benefits:
- TRAVEL RATIONING: Oxford, with its car ban, offers residents
and those just outside the restricted zones permits that allow
them to travel a certain number of days a year (Traffic filters |
Oxfordshire County Council).
- TIME-LIMITED EXEMPTIONS: For residents and the low-paid in
Birmingham (Applications open for
Clean Air Zone exemption permits | Birmingham City Council)
- PARK AND RIDE / PARK AND CYCLE: With the success of Cambridge
in converting millions of car journeys into bus trips each year
(population just 150,000), an expanded system of park and ride
facilities close to major roads heading in and out of London
would not only cut emissions and congestion but would continue to
do so long after the ULEZ non-compliant vehicles have gone on the
scrap heap.
“Everyone wants cleaner air but the AA survey among our London
members shows that, for those that can’t afford to upgrade their
cars and now face being priced off the road, the expanded ULEZ’s
daily charges are a threat to their health, their well-being,
their safety and family life,” says Edmund King, the AA’s
president.
“The Mayor has announced an expanded scrappage scheme for private
car owners but, once again, it is limited to those on benefits –
not those working long hours and multiple jobs to improve their
quality of life, nor the elderly who invested in cars they
thought would be their last and provide the mobility for their
health needs, nor those for whom cars make them feel safe when
they travel – particularly at night.”
ends
Media contact: AA Public Affairs on 01256 493493
NOTES TO EDITORS:
* ULEZ Judicial Review to
last two days | London Borough of Bexley
** Page 87 of the ULEZ Impact Assessment:
*** Yonder conducted an online sample of 14,668 UK adults aged
18-65+ between 16th and 24th January 2023. Data is weighted to be
representative of the population of the UK. Targets for quotas
and weights are taken from the PAMCO survey, a random probability
survey conducted annually with 35,000 adults. Yonder is a
founding member of the British Polling Council and abides by its
rules.