Neil Parish (Tiverton and Honiton) (Con) (Urgent Question): To ask
the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs,
what steps his Department will take to improve air quality after
the High Court ruling on 21 February 2018. The Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Dr Thérèse Coffey)...Request free
trial
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Ah! A Liberal Democrat competition. I call Layla Moran.
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Thank you, Mr Speaker.
I am very grateful to the Minister for her letter and her
offer to meet me to discuss the plan for Oxford, which I
intend to take up. Will she confirm, however, that it is
not just a meeting that she is having with the councils,
and that there is also extra money? I know that they have
already been trying.
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I did not mention this earlier, but yesterday I wrote to
all Members affected by the impact of yesterday’s legal
ruling, which binds the councils legally to co-operate
with what we were already doing. I have engaged in
correspondence with the leader of Oxford City Council,
and look forward to meeting her next week. The council is
looking at certain proposals which include widening the
pedestrianised area in the city centre in order to tackle
the challenges. I want to know what resources or powers
it may need, but I think that it has powers already, and
it may just be a case of working through the details of
the plan.
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Will my hon. Friend give us more details about what the
Government are doing to support renewable technology in
order to secure the future of clean energy in the United
Kingdom?
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In addition to the £3.5 billion that we are investing to
tackle, in particular, air quality in the context of a
modal shift, we are massively increasing the incentives
for councils to help to deploy the infrastructure that is
needed to support the growth in the use of electric
vehicles. There is already a reasonably generous grant
for people who wish to buy such vehicles—about £1 billion
has been allocated—and, as my hon. Friend will know,
legislation that is currently before Parliament will
require fuel stations to provide the electric
infrastructure that enables people to charge their cars,
rather than just filling them with petrol and diesel.
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As chair of my party’s Back-Bench environment, food and
rural affairs committee, may I say to the Minister that
this is not good enough? We are talking about a national
health emergency: according to recent estimates, a
million people could probably die by 2040. The Minister
must act now, with the manufacturers, with local
authorities, and with everyone else.
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I welcome the hon. Gentleman’s support for the effort to
get local authorities working on this. He will, I hope,
be aware from the letter that I sent him yesterday that
we have been in correspondence. We recently funded a
significant number of buses—350, I think—in the West
Yorkshire combined authority, and there is clearly an
opportunity for those new buses to be deployed in the
worst traffic hotspots so that we can work on air
pollution. I look forward to meeting the leader of
Kirklees council and other West Yorkshire authorities
next week.
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I thank the Minister for meeting me a couple of weeks ago
to discuss specific Bath issues. She was helpful and
pragmatic. I agree that local leadership is needed.
The Minister mentioned the new legislation earlier. I do
not think that it goes far enough. May I ask again
whether she will consider introducing regulations
requiring owners of public facilities such as
supermarkets and public car parks to provide electric car
charging points?
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I did have a very constructive meeting with the hon. Lady
recently. I also visited Bath last year to see at first
hand the challenges that it is facing. The hon. Lady will
know of the grants that have already been provided to
increase electric vehicle take-up. However, I take her
point, and I will discuss it with the Under-Secretary of
State for Transport, my hon. Friend the Member for
Hereford and South Herefordshire (Jesse Norman).
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Oxford was excluded from the mandated list because only
3% of our monitoring sites were included. Do the
Government now accept that that decision was wrong, and
that, as the first British city to commit itself to a
zero-emission zone, we really need the powers and
resources that she mentioned?
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Oxford City Council already has those powers. It could
have done this years ago. The powers were granted some
time ago in the Transport Act 2000. The judge yesterday
upheld the fact that our modelling had fulfilled our
legal requirements, although I am conscious that the
local air monitoring does not comply with the legislation
by which we are bound. I am pleased that Oxford is
considering wider pedestrianisation in its city centre,
and I look forward to discussing that in detail next
week. However, it has those powers already. It can get on
with this, and I encourage it to do so as quickly as
possible.
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Although I am grateful to the Minister for the funding
she has given to cash-strapped authorities such as
Bristol for consultations on clean-air zones, I would
like her to move a little further and think of the
children who are at school in one of the worst-polluted
areas in the centre of Bristol, St Michael on the Mount
Without. Will she urgently consider a scrappage scheme
for cars and other vehicles, such as taxis and buses?
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I have discussed air quality with the hon. Lady before.
She will be aware that I have had direct discussions with
Bristol City Council. She will also be aware of the
funding that has already gone in to help the uptake of
electric vehicles and the buses that are being provided
from transport funds. Bristol is making good progress. It
is one of the councils that we mandated last year to come
forward with action; I believe that it is on track,
mainly, with its process and I look forward to receiving
its final considerations later this year.
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After eight years of court cases, I find the Minister’s
minimalistic approach quite staggering. Why are her
Government investing in a new generation of dirty diesel
trains, which are a major issue in my constituency, as
they idle outside residential areas?
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As my hon. Friend the Member for Orpington (Joseph
Johnson), the Rail Minister, said, we are going to end
the use of diesel-only trains by 2040. That has given a
clear steer to the procurers and operators, on the basis
that they tend to invest in 15-year cycles. Our rail
electrification programme is considerably greater than
that of the Labour Government, who, when in power for 13
years between 1997 and 2010, achieved 13 miles, so
frankly, it is not for Labour Members to lecture us today
about these issues. Since 2010, we have been investing to
fix the problems that they left behind.
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Three years after the Volkswagen story broke, how are the
Government holding the company to account for its
emissions scandal?
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We have been holding Volkswagen to account. One of the
challenges of how the EU operates in this regard is that
it is for the German Government to be the regulator of
Volkswagen, and we hold Volkswagen directly to account
through the European Commission. I am pleased that
Volkswagen has come forward with its wider group to do
some of the retrofitting of vehicles in terms of software
updates to correct what it did, and I am pleased that
that is now being fixed, but frankly, the behaviour of
Volkswagen and its chief executives was a disgrace. The
way they used money to fund research into the effects of
diesel fumes on primates and humans is frankly
disgusting. They should hang their heads in shame, but we
are now fixing the problems that they created.
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