Bristol is leading the charge to axe diesel cars after announcing plans to banish polluting vehicles by March 2021.
The city has been something of an innovator when it comes to green issues as we have pointed out in the past with their own council-owned energy company and their pioneering use of poo-powered buses.
The next step is for all privately owned diesel vehicles to be forced to steer clear of the city while non-compliant commercial vehicles like buses, taxis, HGVs and LGVs will be force to pay a charge.
If approved by the council’s cabinet, the plans will make Bristol the first city in the UK to take a bold step like this one. The Clean Air Zone plan will deliver “the fastest possible improvement in air quality against targets for nitrogen dioxide legal limits” say council chiefs.
Mayor of Bristol Marvin Rees reckons that the measures – along with beefing up public transport offerings – are integral to meet his pledge to reduce the reliance on cars and boosting bus usage.
“These ambitious plans demonstrate our commitment to tackling air pollution so we meet legal limits within the shortest time, without disproportionally affecting citizens on lower incomes which would happen with a blanket approach to charging vehicles,” he said.