FOI request detail

Ulez expansion and official emissions records

Request ID: FOI-1798-2223
Date published: 01 November 2022

You asked

So it’s been over a year since the ulez expansion and I don’t see any change in pollution. All I see is that I’m still paying you £12.50 per day to drive my car. What I need from you is the official emissions records you have from before and after the ulez expansion.

We answered

TfL Ref: 1798-2223

Thank you for your request received by Transport for London (TfL) on 24 October 2022 asking for information about expanding the Ultra Low Emissions Zone and records on London’s air quality.

Your request has been considered in accordance with the requirements of the Environmental Information Regulations and our information access policy.  I can confirm that we hold the information you require. You asked for the following:

So it’s been over a year since the ulez expansion and I don’t see any change in pollution.

All I see is that I’m still paying you £12.50 per day to drive my car.

the official emissions records you have from before and after the ulez expansion

The 2021/22 edition of the Annual Report states that: ‘The ULEZ has to date had a transformational impact on air pollution, contributing to a 44 per cent reduction in roadside nitrogen dioxide within its boundaries’.

As stated in the Annual Reports, net income from our schemes is spent on delivering the Mayor’s Transport Strategy and incorporated into the overall TfL budget and reinvested in walking, cycling and public transport as set out in our published budgets and Business Plans, which are available on our website here: https://tfl.gov.uk/corporate/publications-and-reports/business-plan. The Annual Reports and Business Plans give further details about the work we are doing to deliver air quality improvements across the capital.

The Mayor’s website has also published a report entitled Air Quality in London 2016-2020 published here:
https://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/air_quality_in_london_2016-2020_october2020final.pdf Chapter 5 of the report provides information on the impacts of the Central London Ultra Low Emission Zone.

Additionally, the following link to the Mayor’s website: https://www.london.gov.uk/WHAT-WE-DO/environment/environment-publications/expanded-ultra-low-emission-zone-six-month-report provides the ‘Expanded Ultra Low Emission Zone Six Month Report; the overview is given below:

‘On 8 April 2019, the Mayor of London launched the world’s first 24-hour Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) in central London. On 25 October 2021, the zone was expanded up to, but not including, the North and South Circular Roads. The ULEZ is now 18 times the size of the original area and covers 4 million people – over a third of London’s population. 
The ULEZ does not operate in isolation. It operates in conjunction with the London-wide Low Emission Zone (LEZ). This was originally launched in 2008. It is the oldest of the capital’s emission control schemes and applies to large and heavy vehicles. In March 2021 enforcement of tougher emission standards for the LEZ began. Prior to this, the standards hadn’t changed since 2012. The LEZ standards are now the same as the ULEZ standards for most large and heavy vehicles. 
Six months on from the ULEZ expansion and over a year on from the enforcement of tighter LEZ standards the data indicate that these schemes are having a significant impact on the number of older, more polluting vehicles seen driving in London and the levels of harmful pollution Londoners are exposed to. 
  • A bigger share of vehicles in London are cleaner. Six months after the launch of the ULEZ expansion nearly 94 per cent of vehicles seen driving in the whole zone meet the strict ULEZ standards on an average day, up from 87 per cent in the weeks before the zone expanded and up from 39 per cent in 2017 when impacts associated with the ULEZ began. The compliance rate on boundary roads is 90 per cent and the compliance rate in outer London is 85 per cent.  
  • There are fewer older, more polluting vehicles in the zone. There were 67,000 fewer non-compliant vehicles in the zone on an average day compared with the period right before the ULEZ expanded, down from an average of 124,000 daily vehicles. This is a reduction of 54 per cent. 
  • The Low Emission Zone continues to have an impact. Large and heavy vehicles, which fall under the London-wide LEZ, have a compliance rate of 96 per cent, up from an estimated 48 per cent in February 2017.
  • There has been an overall reduction in vehicles and traffic flows in the zone. Overall, there were 21,000 fewer vehicles seen in the zone on an average day (a reduction of 2 per cent) and early estimates suggest traffic flows are around 2 per cent lower than the weeks before the expansion launched. However, many factors are currently affecting traffic trends in London and we will continue to review the data to better understand the impact of ULEZ expansion in the longer term.   
  • Drivers are ditching diesel cars. On average there were 44,000 fewer diesel cars driving in the zone each day – a 20 per cent decrease since the weeks before the ULEZ expanded. 
  • This means people in the zone are breathing cleaner air. The amount of pollution in the air, the concentration, is what ultimately impacts people’s health. Harmful NO2 concentrations alongside roads in inner London are estimated to be 20 per cent lower than they would have been without the ULEZ and its expansion. In central London, NO2 concentrations are estimated to be 44 per cent lower than they would have been. This decrease in concentrations close to roads would have also led to reduced air pollution in locations away from traffic. 
  • The air is also cleaner on the boundary. All monitoring sites on the boundary of the expanded zone have seen reductions in NO2 concentrations, with an estimated 17-24 per cent reduction in pollution on the boundary compared to a scenario without the ULEZ’.

If this is not the information you are looking for, or if you are unable to access it for any reason, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Please see the attached information sheet for details of your right to appeal as well as information on copyright and what to do if you would like to re-use any of the information we have disclosed.

Yours sincerely



Jasmine Howard
FOI Case Officer
FOI Case Management Team
General Counsel
Transport for London
 

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