£260 million of clean air funding launched by government
A package of funding worth more than £260 million has today been
launched by the government to help improve air quality in some of
the most polluted areas. The UK Plan for
Tackling Roadside Nitrogen Dioxide Concentrations was
produced by the government in July last year, and outlined that
councils with the worst levels of air pollution at busy road
junctions and hotspots must take robust action in the shortest time
possible. ...Request free trial
A package of funding worth more than £260 million has today been
launched by the government to help improve air quality in some of
the most polluted areas.
The UK Plan for Tackling Roadside Nitrogen
Dioxide Concentrations was produced by the government
in July last year, and outlined that councils with the worst
levels of air pollution at busy road junctions and hotspots must
take robust action in the shortest time possible.
Fulfilling a commitment to support local authorities to deliver
these plans, the government has today launched a £220m Clean Air
Fund to minimise the impact of local plans on
individuals and businesses. A range of options local authorities
could consider to utilise this money such as new park and ride
services, freight consolidation centres, concessionary travel
schemes and improvements to bus fleets have been set out.
At the same time, more than £40 million from the £255 million
Implementation Fund has been awarded to support local authorities
take action as soon as possible to improve air quality.
This includes:
- £11.7 million to the 28 local authorities with the
biggest air quality challenges to help carry out the work needed
to develop air quality plans, including securing resource and
expertise;
- £24.5 million to the same 28 local areas to support a
range of measures to take action locally. Examples include
installing electric charge point hubs in car parks; junction
improvements; bus priority measures; building cycle routes;
incentivising ultra-low emission taxis through licensing schemes
and leasing electric vehicles; and traffic management and
monitoring systems;
- £2.4 million from the 2017/18 Air Quality Grant for
local community projects to tackle air quality at a grass roots
level. This comes in addition to £3.7m already awarded in last
year’s Air Quality Grant, which included an award winning project
taken forward by Westminster City Council to provide advice and
toolkits for small and medium businesses to reduce transport
emissions from deliveries associated with their
operations;
- £1.65 million to support the 33 local authorities
that have been asked to conduct targeted feasibility studies to
identify measures that could bring forward compliance dates
within the shortest possible time.
Environment Minister Thérèse Coffey said:
“We have been clear that local leaders are best placed to develop
innovative plans that rapidly meet the needs of their
communities. Today’s funding demonstrates the government’s
commitment to support the local momentum needed and continue to
improve our air now and for future generations.
“Improving air quality is about more than just tackling emissions
from transport, so later this year we will publish a
comprehensive Clean Air Strategy. This will set out how we will
address all forms of air pollution, delivering cleaner air for
the whole country.”
Today’s announcement is part of a £3.5billion plan to improve air
quality and reduce harmful emissions.
Note to editors:
|