Surrey your air - Woking Borough Council
Transcription
Surrey your air - Woking Borough Council
MI LL EN NI UM RE PO SURREY YOUR AIR Prepared by the Surrey Chief Environmental Health Officers Group and Surrey district and borough councils RT Surrey millennium 4 Air pollution across the county 7 The problems – and taking action HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU... 10 Living next to a motorway. Constant traffic, bad air? 11 Driving to work. How much pollution do Surrey commuters breathe? 12 Pollution indoors. Do you escape pollution by staying at home? 13 Incinerators are planned in Surrey: what about toxic emissions? 14 If you can ‘smell’ the planes, does that mean pollution is too high? 15 Overshadowed by industry. Cause for concern? 16 Outdoor activity: does heavy exercise worsen your pollution dose? 2 17 In the city. Dirty windowsills, dirty lungs? 18 Near a quarry. Dust clouds may annoy but they don’t threaten health 19 In the garden, Nice garden, but shame about the bonfire! SURREY: YOUR AIR air quality report DOWN YOUR WAY... AIR QUALITY IN YOUR AREA 20 Elmbridge 21 Epsom and Ewell 22 Guildford 23 Mole Valley 24 Reigate and Banstead 25 Runnymede 26 Spelthorne 27 Surrey Heath 28 Tandridge 29 Waverley 30 Woking FINDING OUT MORE... SURREY: YOUR AIR 31 Pollutants and their health effects 34 Global warming, petrol v.diesel 35 Further information 3 An at a glance guide to AIRPORTS: Heathrow and Gatwick are both outside of Surrey – but their air emissions affect the county, particularly Spelthorne, Mole Valley and Reigate & Banstead. See page 14 MOTORWAYS: Surrey has the busiest motorways in the country. But latest research suggests that vehicle emissions dissipate to background levels within 100m of the roadside. But traffic growth could eventually overwhelm efforts to clean up engines. See page 10 BUSY TOWN CENTRES: Vehicle emissions can build up in canyon-like town centre streets, but for the most part, there isn’t sufficient town centre traffic to create dangerous levels of pollution. See page 17 4 SURREY: YOUR AIR emissions in the county LONDON: London and its suburbs provide a concentration of emissions from houses and vehicles. Luckily for Surrey, prevailing winds blow these away from the county GRAVEL WORKINGS: Surrey has numerous sand and stone workings. These create dust, but effects are localised, and particles so large as to be of minimal health impact. See page 18 RURAL SURREY: Sadly living remote from roads and cities is no guarantee of clean air – pollutants such as ozone and particles can blow in from as far as Europe to cause summer and winter smogs across the whole of the south east. See page 29 SURREY: YOUR AIR WHAT CAN BE DONE? Alternative fuel vehicles promise a short term fix to air quality problems. Gas and electric cars are used by councils as examples to others. See page 8 5 THE PROBLEM Where is the bad air? WELCOME TO THIS millennium review of air quality in Surrey boroughs and districts. Find out what you are breathing all day, every day. Are diesels dirty? Can I light a bonfire? What about fumes on the pavement? Is commuting bad for my health? Do factories leak poisonous pollution? These and other questions will be answered in this report. We hope you will be both informed and reassured about the air you breathe. Pick up and browse this introduction to air quality – the subject can get very complicated. We have tried to provide an easy-to-read overview for you to dip in and dip out of. If you want to find out more about the chemistry, the law and the detail, then we point you to more detailed sources at the back. 6 THOSE HOTSPOTS WE’RE These are the polluters that we most worry about: ● Heathrow and Gatwick airports. Too many aircraft and vehicles creating pollution ● Main roads: Vast swathes of Surrey are affected by traffic emissions These are the places we are most worried about: ● Spelthorne, especially near Heathrow Airport ● Horley, downwind of Gatwick Airport ● Houses near the M3, M25 and M23. Detailed modelling of Horley shows the spread of pollution – coloured in red – from Gatwick But just because we are concerned, that does not mean air in these places is dangerous, nor does it mean air elsewhere is necessarily clean. Find out where, why and how within this report. SURREY: YOUR AIR Taking action.. WORRIED ABOUT A LOOK AT THE AIR QUALITY map of Surrey will reveal that more than anything else, it is excess traffic that is causing most pollution. Even Gatwick and Heathrow airports – that are prompting air quality management areas – are problems more because of road traffic than their aeroplanes. Pointing the blame at the car is easy – finding solutions to the problem is less easy. Surrey residents have enjoyed perhaps the highest level of car ownership and use in the UK and are not readily about to abandon their carbased lifestyles that enable such versatile work and social lives. With pollution so closely related to congestion, the answer to improving air quality is inextricably linked with reducing traffic. Ten years ago there was a belief that road building would be the answer to reducing congestion. But once the planners unveiled their vision of a 14-lane M25, residents began to realise that the environmental impact might be too much. Even traffic planners pointed out that such a road might well be free flowing but it would be impossible to access it as feeder roads would be clogged up. A compromise was agreed and widening to dual four lanes went ahead. Now the M25 between junctions 12 and 14 is due to be widened to dual five lanes and to four lanes between junction 1415. Together with the expected consent for Heathrow’s fifth terminal, extra traffic is inevitable. But where can it go? While it may not seem like it, Surrey’s roads – including the M25 – are free flowing for most of the day, most days of the week. The continued growth in vehicle traffic means that congestion will spread across the network, and across the day. Cleaner engines will compensate for some of that growth – but not all. Something else must be done, and it will involve everyone doing their bit. These pages explain who is doing what to clean up the air. ACTION FROM THE GOVERNMENT WITH INDUSTRY CONTRIBUTING SO LITTLE TO SURREY’S AIR quality problems, any action to reduce pollution across the eleven boroughs and districts must focus on reducing the impact of vehicle emissions and traffic growth. They may even have to cut traffic levels. Reducing pollution from new vehicles is achieved at European level by a series of directives that force vehicle makers and importers to comply with staged pollution limits. In this way cars today are ten times cleaner than cars sold ten years ago. Today’s petrol cars are so clean that there is little left to clean up, and future improvements are unlikely to make up for traffic growth. So the Government is aware that it must encourage fewer car and truck trips. It can subsidise rail freight facilities – but relatively little congestion is caused by trucks. Better and cheaper trains and buses is an obvious solution – but few will voluntarily switch to public transport in a rural area such as Surrey, unless they are heading for London. Making car journeys more expensive could tip the balance towards public transport – but increased fuel taxes are not popular – and surveys suggest that many drivers will not be priced off the road. For them, despite the congestion, the car is simply too convenient. SURREY: YOUR AIR 7 TAKING ACTION ACTION FROM LOCAL AUTHORITIES WHILE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT HAS the ability to discourage drivers through higher fuel taxes, these were so unpopular that fuel duty is now being left alone. Local authorities are in a much better position to carry out small but significant initiatives, although do not have much money to fund such programmes. Local authorities have pedestrianised high streets such as Redhill and Staines which help air quality. They have introduced higher parking charges in areas such as Guildford in a bid to discourage commuter parking, and have also introduced a park and ride scheme and free town centre shuttle bus. They have improved walking and cycling facilities in places such as Woking to encourage a switch to these less polluting forms of transport, as well as subsidising local bus routes to offer an alternative to the car. Councils such as Surrey Heath have invested in electric or gas powered cars to set an example to others to ‘do their bit’. And as a few ‘gross polluters’ in badly maintained cars can have a disproportionate effect on air quality, some local authorities can test vehicles to ensure they have clean emissions. Air quality monitoring stations can assess the effects of such policies on the actual air we breathe. And they can fund ‘travelwise’ initiatives to explain to the public why they should think green and leave their car at home. Through planning controls, councils can require new businesses to introduce green travel plans and reduce car use. ACTION FROM INDUSTRY Modern, efficient public transport may not be enough to get drivers out of their cars Polluting industry (left) in Surrey is now a thing of the past 8 SURREY IS ONE OF THE LEAST industrialised counties in the country – just a handful of factories remain open, producing negligible emissions. Mole Valley has more than its fair share of industrial chimneys, other boroughs have crematoria and other processes that have the potential to create pollution. In the event, the Environment Agency sets emission limits for these processes, which industry must meet, or be closed down. Smaller industrial processes – for instance vehicle paint resprayers – produce emissions than can be annoying for their neighbours. Local authorities regulate these to ensure that health effects and odour nuisance is kept to a minimum. New national legislation is being introduced to ensure that industry strives not just to keep their local environment clean – the climate change levy means they must cut their global warming emissions too. SURREY: YOUR AIR ACTION FROM YOU Less travel, less pollution IT IS EASY TO ASSUME THAT YOURS is the most important journey. Whether you are a commuter, a school run mum, a shopper or simply on a leisure trip, your journey is important to you otherwise you wouldn’t be making it – and it is very easy to think of solutions that involve other people getting out of their cars to make way for you! The reality is that everyone must do their bit – cutting out a few journeys here, walking a bit there, sharing a car here, walking to school, all these will reduce the frightening growth that threatens to swamp our local roads. You can make a real difference by constantly thinking before emitting. Choose the smallest, most efficient car that is suitable for you needs. Try to avoid driving unnecessarily fast, or accelerating fiercely. Plan your journey to miss peak times. You will save yourself time, fuel and emissions, and avoid worsening the congestion. And it will also be less stressful. Keep your car tuned, it will save money and cut excessively high emissions. Instead of taking your car out time and time again, why not link your journeys together so that you do many things at once. And if you can, share your car – or get a lift with someone else. No one expects drivers to give up their cars or walk ridiculously long distances – but it will help to use them a little less. Cycling and walking: better for your health CLEARLY CYCLING AND WALKING DO not pollute the environment, and the exercise is good for your health. One in five car trips are short enough to walk or cycle, and if those trips SURREY: YOUR AIR were removed from the roads, excess pollution would vanish. Witness the distinct drop in congestion during the school holidays when there are more people on holiday, and fewer school runs! Less waste: less incineration If everyone does a little, emissions will be cut by a lot. Recycling, car sharing, walking, cycling and using public transport will cut emissions enough to make our towns and cities more healthy THE PROPOSED INCINERATORS at Redhill (Copyhold), Dorking (Capel) and Guildford (Slyfield Industrial Estate) have raised the profile of waste disposal across the county. Ask most residents about their waste, and their usual reaction is that they don’t care what happens to it – provided it doesn’t happen near them. Other counties are unlikely to accept our waste, and if numerous incinerators are to be avoided, residents must help reduce their waste pile by recycling, composting and actively choosing products with less packaging. Indoors.... DON’T FORGET THAT WE SPEND MOST of our time indoors and most of our exposure can be from indoor pollutants. Some we can’t avoid, such as the fumes from new furniture and carpets. Others are more easy to reduce, paint odour can be reduced with low odour water based replacements. Fumes from tobacco smoke and even frying food on cookers can produce huge amounts of pollutants – an open window or extractor fan can cut exposure to a minimum. 9 HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU Living next to a motorway The problem Across the South East, it is excess traffic that is causing air quality problems. There are few Surrey boroughs not touched by busy trunk roads and motorways such as the M25, M3, M23, A3 or A30 and some sections of these roads are uncomfortably close to homes. There are many ‘local’ roads feeding these huge traffic arteries that carry as much traffic as some of the trunk roads themselves. Where traffic is free flowing on these roads, provided volumes are not excessive, then emissions from vehicles are generally dispersed before they become a problem. Very few houses in Surrey are less than 50m from the motorway verge where pollutants can be concentrated. But where there is congestion on motorways, there can be a disproportionate rise in emissions, and the zone 10 of influence of the motorway could be extended. What can the authorities do? Traffic using motorways and trunk roads is the responsibility of central Government which manages those roads through the Highways Agency. Much of the traffic using the motorway is long distance – traffic heading for the ports, for instance. But the real peak time congestion is caused by local commuter traffic. Central Government can try to discourage such journeys by raising fuel prices and improving public transport in a bid to provide the ‘stick and carrot’ to encourage drivers off the road. But this is unpopular. Surrey boroughs have no control over long distance traffic, but have some influence on traffic heading for Surrey’s employment and A familiar site in the South East – here the M3 is uncomfortably close to these houses near Farnborough shopping centres. Here, parking controls, traffic calming, improved walking and cycling facilities, better local transport and park and ride schemes will persuade some to make fewer car trips. Where houses are simply too close to traffic – as is the case with 50 houses in Reigate and Banstead, for instance – these houses are declared air quality management areas in a bid to focus attention on the problem. What can you do? No one expects residents to stop using their cars, but maybe some trips can be avoided by car sharing, using public transport, walking or cycling. Pollution is at its worst in stop-start motorway traffic, so timing journeys to avoid congestion will improve emissions. And of course, keep your car tuned. SURREY: YOUR AIR Driving to work The problem Surrey’s motorways are notoriously busy – and much of this traffic is heading for town centres in the county. Larger centres such as Guildford, Staines, Woking and Epsom have notorious peak hour traffic problems. But smaller centres such as Reigate, Dorking, Farnham and Leatherhead also suffer congestion. While traffic volumes are far less than those on the motorways, the urban nature of these centres means that the traffic is stationary for much of the time, and stop-start traffic is at its most inefficient, creating excess polluting emissions. This effect is worsened because the pollution can be trapped within street ‘canyons’, and there are many people living – sometimes literally – on the doorstep of these choked-up roads. Those residents breathe the poor air for most of the day. discourage car traffic, including pedestrianisation, traffic calming and parking controls. They can encourage bus and train travel through subsidies and better facilities, as well as providing cycle lanes and a safer, more pleasant walking environment. What can you do? Is your journey really necessary? Without thinking about it, you probably already ask yourself this question when you know the town is Cars are very convenient, but not in large numbers on your doorstep congested, and you probably decide to re-time your journey. This spreads out the emissions, and can help a little. Also ask yourself whether you can make use of public transport, or walk or cycle. Keeping your car tuned is very important, as one ‘gross polluter’ can produce 20 times more pollution than a well tuned car, and those fumes hang around in the very streets others are living, and you want to visit. Otherwise smoother acceleration, reduced engine revving and keeping to speed limits will help. What can the authorities do? Local authorities are being given an increasing range of powers to tackle excess traffic, and are being actively encouraged to seek solutions to poor air quality in town centres. For those that declare air quality management areas, the council will be able to set up roadside testing to catch those vehicles that are badly tuned and emitting dangerous quantities of pollutants. Councils can use a range of transport measures to SURREY: YOUR AIR 11 HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU and cleaning chemicals. New homes are subject to building regulations that ensure a minimum standard of ventilation. Pollution indoors The problem For those with breathing difficulties, it is easy to assume that the problem is caused by ‘someone else’, whether it be other drivers, industry or even neighbouring countries. Most people spend the vast majority of their time indoors in their own home, and as such most of their exposure to pollutants takes place in the home. While it is true that outdoor pollution does find its way inside, particularly with the windows open, the vast majority of indoor pollution comes from sources such as cookers, heaters, smoking, furniture and activities such as dusting and vacuuming. Particles in the dust, and gases from cooking, can have the same effect – or worse – than 12 outdoor pollution. And tobacco smoke contains cancerous compounds such as benzene and 1,3 butadiene that can cause cancer and leukaemia. What can the authorities do? Your home is your castle, and air quality regulations that control outdoor air do not stretch to inside your home. You really can do what you like inside your home in terms of air quality, and that’s the way most people want it to stay. But there are things the authorities can do to help, such as ensuring fumes from new furniture are not excessive, and controlling volatile emissions from substances such as paints Day to day activities such as vacuuming, cooking and smoking will worsen indoor pollution What can you do? Clearly smoking within the home creates a massive burden of pollution, and the health impacts on those who share your home are well known. If you must smoke in the home, adequate ventilation will reduce the effects slightly. Ventilation is also essential for those using gas cookers and heating. Immediate dangers from using gas appliances are well known – carbon monoxide is a suffocating gas. But the longer term effect of gases and particles from internal gas burning can have cumulative effects. Making a conscious decision to buy low odour paints, and using volatile solvents and cleaners as little as possible will help. For instance leaving brushes in pots of white spirit inside the house is unnecessary. SURREY: YOUR AIR Downwind from an incinerator The problem With three incinerators planned in Surrey, there is much concern about any possible health impacts from local plants. Increasing amounts of rubbish generated by Surrey residents, and pressure to reduce the amount of rubbish buried in the ground means that waste authorities must find more sustainable ways to deal with rubbish. Burying domestic rubbish – landfill – is therefore being phased out and this will reduce adverse health impacts from landfill emissions that some believe cause birth defects. When rubbish is buried, it produces many gases as it decomposes, mostly these are global warming gases such as methane, but there are also SURREY: YOUR AIR contaminants such as heavy metals mixed up in the fumes. Even if these are collected and burnt off, fears remain that the gases are harmful. If landfill is to be reduced, rubbish has to go somewhere. Some can be recycled – Surrey districts achieve 17%, more than the 11% national average, and this must increase – by law. But the realistic maximum recycling rate achievable is 50%, leaving 50% of the rubbish stream requiring disposal. Incinerators are designed to reduce the volume of this remaining rubbish, and recover energy by burning it. But any industrial process has its risks, and incinerator emissions contain the usual fumes that can be expected from any burning activity – including toxic substances such a dioxins (although special treatment plant will remove most). What can the authorities do? Incinerators – like this one in south east London – will be unwelcome neighbours in Surrey Every attempt will be made to avoid incineration, mostly through recycling. Councils have a responsibility to make it easy for the public to recycle, and to correctly sort the waste stream to recycle materials. Central government can play its role by setting tough recycling targets, and making laws to cut down excess packaging. But some incineration will be necessary. Your local borough will fight to ensure that incinerators are not built in unsuitable locations. Central Government has set extremely tight limits that will minimise emissions, and the Environment Agency will enforce those limits firmly and transparently. What can you do? Waste is not someone else’s problem. We all create rubbish, and we all have a responsibility to do our bit to ensure it is dealt with in the best way possible. The obvious minimum is that householders should use bottle banks and doorstep recycling collections where provided. Garden waste can be composted in your garden – or at local recycling depots, avoiding the need to burn or landfill unnecessary volumes. In the longer term, if consumers made a conscious decision to choose products with less packaging, manufacturers would take the hint that unnecessary packaging is bad for their sales as well as the environment. 13 HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU Neighbouring an airport The problem While there are no major international airports in Surrey, three boroughs – Spelthorne, Mole Valley and Reigate & Banstead – find themselves close to Heathrow and Gatwick. Traffic serving the airport – and to a lesser extent the planes themselves – converge on a relatively small area and inevitably create a pollution hotspot. While the continued improvement in car technology will mitigate road traffic growth, the expected long term growth in air travel will increase flight numbers and emissions. At present there is little prospect that improving 14 aircraft technology can help in reducing engine emissions to compensate for this volume increase. What can the authorities do? Air travel is by its very nature an international business. It is regulated at international rather than local level and as such even the UK Government has very little control over issues such as aviation fuel taxation and flight movement limits. International agreement on curbing air traffic is unlikely. Local authorities have no control at all over the air traffic – but can influence traffic serving the airport, and Overflown in Reigate and Banstead (top). Emissions from aircraft, and cars, can cause problems try to ensure that public transport use is maximised. Coupled with improvements in road vehicle engine technology, this will reduce emissions from passengers driving to the airport. What can you do? Few residents will be prepared to forgo their foreign holidays to improve air quality. But you can do your bit by using public transport to arrive at the airport. But be aware that there is a growing recognition that ticket prices must rise to reflect the full environmental cost of air travel. SURREY: YOUR AIR Next door to industry The problem Surrey is a rural county for one so close to London, and there are few industrial processes of note, barely a dozen are large enough to be regulated by the Environment Agency. Potentially polluting processes that are in the county include brickworks, crematoria and paint shops. These are relatively clean compared to heavy processes in industrial areas elsewhere. But even small processes can, if poorly managed, have an impact on local air quality, and emissions such as dust and combustion fumes will cause a nuisance and possible health hazard if not SURREY: YOUR AIR properly monitored and controlled. What can the authorities do? Industry is regulated by both local authorities and the Environment Agency, and a measure of their impact on industry is that many older, dirtier processes have chosen to close down rather than comply with tighter emission rules. Such rules, and tight enforcement of those rules, have directly benefited Surrey’s air quality. For those processes that remain, both the Environment Agency and local authorities are required to retain tight control. This can include monitoring of emissions from tall chimney stacks, and ensuring that odours and emissions from small car respraying businesses are controlled effectively. Central Government, and Europe, is continually studying impacts of many everyday industrial processes, and it is inevitable that new laws will drive down emissions still further over the coming years. What can you do? Perhaps of all the air quality impacts, industrial emissions is the one where the public really can blame someone else, and leave the solutions for someone else to implement. Should you live near industry, Surrey is predominantly regulators will always welcome reports of emission rural – but ‘spikes’ from nearby facilities, what if you and will use those reports to live near this Capel factory? reduce future releases. 15 HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU The great outdoors The problem There is a dilemma for many of those who contemplate sport and outdoor activities: is the pollution so bad that the additional pollutants breathed in during exercise might damage the lungs and counteract any health benefits in taking the exercise? Cycling and walking in town centres is of particular concern here, as these groups are using pavements that are on or next to busy main roads. Such main roads, which are frequently congested, tend to harbour pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide and particles, and in summer, ground level ozone might also be present. Such pollutants are known to cause ill health. What can the authorities do? With traffic as the main source of pollution, ways of reducing traffic have been dealt with elsewhere in this publication. Local authorities can help by segregating walkers and cyclists from traffic – perhaps with plants and fences – but Surrey town centres usually do not have sufficient space for such segregation. National government can continue to sponsor research into the very complex interactions between the pollutants involved and health effects, and make available its evidence on why outdoor exercise remains good for you. What can you do? The best advice is that pollution drops off quickly 16 If air quality is so bad, is outdoor activity a good idea? away from the road centreline, and exposure on the footpath is considerably less than that of drivers in the carriageway. Even cyclists, who ride at the edge of the road and breathe air at a higher level than most car exhausts, escape the worst of the fumes. There is absolute certainty that for normal healthy individuals, the health benefits of regular outdoor exercise easily outweigh the disadvantages of increased exposure to outdoor pollutants. For your own health, and the health of those round you, continue to exercise outdoors, preferably replacing car trips. If you have a choice, clearly it is more pleasant to exercise away from busy roads. For those that are susceptible to pollution, keep an eye on pollution forecasts and avoid heavy exercise during smog alerts. SURREY: YOUR AIR Living in the town The problem Urban dwellers are well aware that the air they breathe is not perfectly clean – they only need to run their fingers along their window sills to see the deposited grime. Traffic creates large amounts of pollution, both directly from exhausts, as well as indirectly through road dust whipped up by the wind and passing traffic. This road dust can contain brake dust, tyre dust and traces of metals found in engines as well as sands and dusts that occur naturally. Researchers have studied whether such pollution causes health effects, and the consensus is that there is a small but significant risk from breathing in such pollutants. What can the authorities do? Town dwellers share their lives with cars and trucks Cutting traffic levels is now at the heart of local authority policy, and cutting emissions from vehicles a priority for manufacturers and legislators. Local authorities monitor air in towns and cities using sophisticated monitoring stations and numerous small tubes that collect the air samples. Laws have been introduced that require authorities to consider the results of this monitoring, and if there is any doubt, carry out modelling to see what will happen in the future. Where they find that pollution might exceed safe limits, they are required to declare an air quality management area. Such a designation is recognition that the air needs to be improved, and also enables the council to implement air quality initiatives. These can include reducing or removing traffic from the worst areas, perhaps by pedestrianisation or building a bypass. What can you do? Reduced car use will of course help improve air quality, but city dwellers will find that closing windows during periods of poor air quality will keep a large proportion of the fumes away. But it has to be emphasised that there are very few streets in Surrey where air quality should cause immediate concern to town dwellers. Bonfires can cause problems for neighbours, so check the advice on page 19. And of course use smokeless fuel in the fireplace. HOW POLLUTION AFFECTS YOU Near a quarry The problem Dust from gravel workings, landfill sites and concrete batching plants can be a nuisance, although rarely a health hazard. Whenever sands, gravels and rock are processed, there is inevitably dust. While such dust is ‘natural’ and present in the air across the UK, there can be noticeably raised concentrations near the facilities themselves. The effect of such concentrations are usually that of nuisance – soiled washing, dirty window sills and cars, and at worst visual intrusion. But the particles are usually so large that they are intercepted by 18 special wheel washers, and if the quarry processing plant burns heavy fuels to dry the sand or gravel, then emissions from those processes are controlled. your lung defences long before they cause a health problem. What can you do? What can the authorities do? Mineral workings such as gravel pits and sand quarries are closely controlled by authorities, and their operating licences stipulate the type and condition of access roads that need to be used. There are many ways of keeping dust to a minimum. The most popular is to ensure that the materials themselves, and haul roads, are kept moist in times of dry weather so they are not blown about. Trucks leaving the facilities should be sheeted and cleaned with Unsightly gravel workings can produce unwanted dust Emissions from gravel processes are more of a nuisance than a health hazard, but for anyone downwind of a dusty facility, that nuisance can be significant, especially in dry weather. When prolonged dry periods are forecast and there is wind, closing windows can help reduce the nuisance. And where operators neglect to carry out procedures to minimise dust, then authorities must be informed to allow them to act. SURREY: YOUR AIR Bonfires The problem Domestic bonfires, and living room fires, can have a far larger effect on local air quality than many might imagine. One large bonfire on a still, calm day can envelop entire neighbourhoods in smoke that can have potentially serious adverse health effects. The pollutants that cause most public concern tend to be dioxins and complicated PAH gases. Uncontrolled burning – even of ‘natural’ garden waste, can produce large amounts of dangerous gases – creating far more exposure than council waste incinerators that we hear so much about. Burning of creosote-treated timber, plastics and rubber can have immediate and dangerous health impacts for those breathing the smoke. SURREY: YOUR AIR What can the authorities do? Businesses are generally aware that burning rubbish and emitting dark smoke is not allowed – they risk heavy fines for doing so. Contrary to popular belief, householders are allowed to have a ‘reasonable’ size garden bonfire. But when householders have too many bonfires, or a bonfire is so smokey as to constitute a nuisance, then environmental health officers are there to enforce nuisance laws and can order a fire to be put out by legal notice and prosecution. Domestic bonfires have far more impact than many imagine What can you do? It is always preferable to compost rubbish rather than burn it – or take it to the local tip. If you must have a bonfire, there are codes of practice (see page 35 for details) that outline how you can minimise impacts. Burning dry wood reduces smoke – but burning wet leaves, or grass cuttings produces large amounts of smoke and even dioxins, it is much better to compost these materials. And choose the timing of the bonfire carefully – perhaps with reference to weather forecasts or air quality warnings in the media. Never have bonfires in times of poor air quality, which typically occur on still summer evenings or winter days. So choose a breezy day, preferably not at the weekend, but ensure the wind is not blowing smoke directly into another house. 19 DOWN YOUR WAY ELMBRIDGE THE BOROUGH OF Elmbridge brings together the 14 communities of Claygate, Cobham, Long and Thames Ditton, Esher, Hersham, Hinchley Wood, East and West Molesey, Oatlands, Oxshott, Stoke D’Abernon, Walton-onThames and Weybridge, together with extensive areas of riverside, commons and countryside between them. The Borough is bordered by the River Thames to the north, the M25 to the south, the River Wey to the west and Kingstonupon-Thames to the east. There are few industrial sources of pollution in the Borough – just a few small industrial units are located in Molesey, Hersham, and Weybridge with other small retail/industrial units scattered throughout the borough, with an increasing number at Brooklands. Generally these are not significant sources of Elmbridge has very little polluting industry. However, areas with greater concentrations of commercial and retail premises – such as Brooklands – will show higher than average levels of trafficrelated pollution, due to more vehicle access 20 Cobham is typical of the many suburban communities that can be found in Surrey. Traffic can build up at times, but by and large pollution is low atmospheric pollution. This leaves traffic as the main sources of air pollution, particularly from the M25, A3, Esher High Street and Hampton Court Way. While some pollution might be high at the roadside, levels quickly subside moving away from the road. The council has reviewed any properties within 50m of busy roads – and found pollution to be within limits. The Borough has an automatic air quality monitoring station located at Bell Farm Junior School in Hersham – the resulting data is available on the Council’s free Air Pollution Information Line, 0800 389 3185. Readings from this station and numerous smaller tube recorders confirm Elmbridge’s air is generally clean. SURREY: YOUR AIR EPSOM & EWELL IS THE most built up borough in Surrey, reflecting its position on the periphery of Greater London conurbation. Although the borough contains areas of dense suburbia, it also includes huge open spaces such as Epsom Downs, a well known beauty spot. While the borough is one of the few in Surrey without a busy motorway, the M25 still makes its presence felt with feeder traffic heading into London on the A24 and A240, where congestion is common inevitably causing emissions. With so many properties EPSOM & EWELL Epsom town centre – the focus for a borough sitting between sprawling London and Surrey’s rural heartland. Busy town centres bring with them the usual problems – especially juggling traffic and pedestrians situated close to these busy roads, these emissions deserve closer scrutiny. The borough has monitored existing air pollution along these roads, and modelled it five years into the future to see if it will improve or worsen. Monitoring suggests that current air quality is above limits some distance away from the main roads. But modelling into the future shows that improving vehicle technology will reduce this pollution leaving only the land within five metres of busy roads at risk. The worst affected areas fall on the A240 between Beggars Roundabout and The Organ Crossroads. But luckily there are no schools, hospitals or houses within five metres of the roadside, and thus nobody is dangerously exposed. A general lack of industry, lack of proximity to airports and other polluters mean there are few other causes of concern in the borough. SURREY: YOUR AIR 21 DOWN YOUR WAY The busy A3 trunk road cuts right through the heart of Guildford, and passes just yards from many homes. The council is monitoring air quality at these sites but subject to continued monitoring, it appears houses are sufficiently far away to avoid the worst of the fumes GUILDFORD TRAFFIC FUMES HAVE traditionally been of most concern to Guildford residents. There is little industry in the borough, airports are some way away, leaving just the busy A3, A331 and Guildford Town Centre to cause concern, although the very busy junction 10 of the M25 dominates the northern gateway. Much of the city centre has been pedestrianised – and removal of heavy traffic has improved air quality in the narrow urban streets where pollutants can so easily collect. But it is perhaps the dual carriageway A3, which takes both commuter traffic and longer distance traffic heading for the South Coast, that has been the focus of borough Guildford is Surrey’s largest town, and attracts many shoppers and workers, most of whom come in their car causing some congestion council attention. There are many houses near the road, in some cases just 20-30m away from the verge. With so many heavy trucks and cars, hills and congestion, surely pollution must be dangerous? Monitoring suggests not, but results approach the national air quality maximum. The borough uses a portable recording station, and pollution levels do appear to tail off relatively quickly across the A3 verge. More latterly, residents have expressed concerns about the proposed incinerator on the Slyfield Road Industrial Estate. Concern focuses on traffic and emissions. All industrial processes create emissions, and the incinerator will be no different, but if the incinerator goes ahead, emissions must be kept to the barest minimum. See incineration, page 13 22 SURREY: YOUR AIR MOLE VALLEY MOLE VALLEY TAKES ITS name from the River Mole which cuts through the North Downs heading towards the River Thames. Some of the most beautiful parts of the North Downs, including Box Hill and Surrey’s highest point, Leith Hill, lie within the borough. The rural nature of the borough means that there are no serious air quality problems that will force the council to declare a statutory air quality management area. That said, there are still places where air quality is poorer than might be preferred – motorways, and in the congested streets of Dorking and Leatherhead. In terms of emissions, the M25 motorway is the major source of air pollution carrying 140,000 vehicles per day from east to west on eight lanes of tarmac. Undoubtedly this traffic produces a considerable amount of pollution, especially nitrogen dioxide and particles, SURREY: YOUR AIR but there are very few properties in Mole Valley close enough to the motorway to be affected. There is of course less traffic in the narrow streets of the borough’s two largest towns – Dorking and Leatherhead. But what traffic there is often sits in queues that can create worse pollution than free flowing traffic. This pollution can be trapped in the ‘canyons’ created by the shop fronts. This pollution has been monitored – for instance in Dorking West Street – where nitrogen dioxide has been found at a concentration of 23 units. This is slightly above what the Government would prefer – but will drop over the next few years to below the stipulated 21 unit threshold. Unusually for Surrey, Mole Valley contains some industry. Brickworks at Wallis Wood, Beare Green and Capel have tall chimneys. The processes are regulated by the Environment Agency, a national body. Over the horizon, plans for an incinerator at Capel is giving locals great cause for concern on emissions grounds. The latest thinking is that emissions from a well-run incinerator will not cause a significant health hazard. There is also future concern over planned expansion of Gatwick, if airport estimates are correct, then air quality in the Hookwood area could suffer. The council is installing a pollution monitor to check this out. Mole Valley has three brickworks – this one is at Wallis Wood. Their tell-tale chimneys may look ominous, but emissions are low, and dispersed high in the air. Box Hill typifies much of Mole Valley. But larger settlements such as Dorking (left) attract shoppers in their cars – concentrating polluting emissions in the town’s narrow streets 23 DOWN YOUR WAY REIGATE & BANSTEAD THE BOROUGH IS centred on the towns of Reigate and Redhill. These attract heavy traffic but not in sufficient amounts to cause air quality concerns. The M25 and M23 motorways slice through the borough – and some 50 houses have been found to be so close as to prompt declaration of air quality management areas. The borough sits on rich sand and chalk deposits, and there are quarries such as that at Merstham. But while quarrying may be a dusty activity, control measures such as damping down of sand mean that little dust escapes into neighbouring settlements to cause a health hazard. Like Guildford and Dorking, there are plans to site an incinerator in Redhill, and there is inevitable concern that emissions may worsen air quality in an area already saturated with motorway traffic. Government experts believe that emissions from modern incinerators are not likely to cause any measureable health effects downwind of the facilities, but increased monitoring will be necessary to reassure the public. The biggest air quality issue for the borough is Gatwick Airport. Horley is downwind of the airport and there are fears that future traffic growth at Gatwick will worsen air quality in parts of the town, some of which is extremely close to the airport. As a result the area of Horley nearest to the airport has been declared an air quality management area. This allows the authorities to focus their attention on reducing emissions for the residents through low emission airport vehicles and management measures on the aircraft stands Quarrying (left) may appear dusty – but not enough to cause a health problem Homes in Horley (above) are close – and downwind – of Gatwick, and air quality is a cause for concern Like many Surrey boroughs, the M25, seen (left) at Merstham, creates great opportunities – but potential air quality problems where houses are close to reduce idling emissions. 24 SURREY: YOUR AIR RUNNYMEDE RUNNYMEDE STRADDLES some of the busiest sections of the M25 motorway, and it’s no surprise that vehicle emissions cause the greatest concern in the borough. With over half a million tonnes of nitrogen oxides every year being emitted within the borough’s motorways, the houses closest to the motorway are likely to be declared an air quality management area in a bid to stimulate improvement. Towns such as Addlestone, Egham, Chertsey find themselves busy during the peak hours with much traffic struggling to reach the M25, but emissions here are not above limits. Similarly the A30 and A317 carry high flows but do not cause SURREY: YOUR AIR exceedences. Monitoring carried out by the borough shows the worst site to be Egham Sports Centre, but even here the health based environmental limits proposed for 2005 are already being achieved. There are no large industries of note in the borough, although there are many gravel pits extracting minerals. Procedures are in place to ensure that dust and other pollutants do not cause a nuisance beyond the site boundary. Heathrow Airport is sufficiently far away to avoid affecting air quality directly, although of course any expansion of the airport could increase traffic congestion and resulting pollution. Emissions from the Central Veterinary Incinerator at Addlestone are tightly controlled – and not thought to have any significant air quality impact in the borough. Motorways dominate Runnymede, giving plenty of polluting emissions. Pollution dies down quickly but the closest houses can be adversely affected (Bittams Road, left) 25 DOWN YOUR WAY SPELTHORNE SPELTHORNE IS THE ONLY borough in Surrey to declare its entire area an air quality management area. Significant sources of pollution in the area include aircraft and vehicles using Heathrow, the M25, M3 and A30. Spelthorne is working with neighbouring authorities, airport operator BAA and British Airways to determine the impact of aircraft emissions and other airport activities on ground level pollution. Spelthorne has assessed benzene levels – a chemical found in fuels – and found them to be no more than 2 units, comfortably below the Government threshold of 5 units. The airport dominates not just emissions in the borough – but also employment. Proximity to Heathrow makes Spelthorne an attractive commercial setting for 26 business, and about 20% of all commercial or industrial property in Surrey is located in the borough, including the headquarters of many national and international companies, such as BP Amoco, Courage, the Ian Allen Group, McVitie’s, Del Monte, Samsung Electronics and Staines Bridge (above) can clog up with traffic as one of the few Thames crossings in the borough Shepperton Film Studios. Unsurprisingly, there is much traffic, and vehicles accessing Heathrow and Spelthorne’s many businesses very quickly clog up the borough’s main roads, including the M25, and roads around Staines. Such congestion leaves vehicles emitting at their worst, and air quality can suffer. The local authority has carried out monitoring across the borough to find out exactly where the problems will be – Staines, Stanwell Village, Stanwell Moor and areas alongside the M3 and A316 in the Sunbury and Sunbury Cross area have been found to be above prescribed limits. To tackle this, the declaration of an air quality management area will ensure that work begins in collaboration with other neighbouring authorities to produce an action plan with the aim of delivering improvements in air quality. Those affected by poor air quality can be assured that something is being done about it. See Living next to an airport, page 14 Heathrow Airport’s activities impact on the borough of Spelthorne. Emissions from planes and airport vehicles have contributed to the borough declaring an air quality management area SURREY: YOUR AIR SURREY HEATH SURREY HEATH SITS to the west of the county straddling the M3 motorway, which is the borough’s ‘biggest’ polluter. The motorway, and congested feeder roads that run through settlements such as Camberley, Bagshot and Windlesham are the most obvious sources of pollution with peak time congestion causing vehicle engines to run inefficiently. Shoppers heading for busy centres such as Camberley and the out-of-town Meadows Centre also add to the traffic burden. Chobham is a cause for concern, where Traffic affects much of the borough, whether it be commuters, long distance traffic, or visitors to Camberley’s shopping facilities (top) Surrey Heath now has its own gas powered car (above) Traffic pollution can be trapped in congested high streets such as Chobham SURREY: YOUR AIR relatively small, narrow streets and queuing traffic can trap pollutants at ground level, these can then build up to undesirable levels. The council has monitored many of these hotspots. The worst of these was beside the M3 at Brickhill, and at the side of the A322 at Bagshot, where nitrogen dioxide levels approach 60 units. By contrast, in areas such as Bisley and Windlesham, background concentrations are about 20 units – clearly showing the effect of the busy traffic. But at Camberley, there is simply too much doubt – and the council has declared an area on the borough boundary, adjacent to the M3, as an air quality management area in order to ensure the health of those affected residents. To help decide exactly how much pollution there is in the borough, the council is using a mobile air quality monitor to record pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide and particles. At the moment this is located alongside the busy A325 Portsmouth Road, opposite Frimley Park Hospital. This work is part of a joint venture with neighbouring authorities and data is being obtained by computer work. FC Browns factory is Surrey’s largest industrial employer and subject to close scrutiny and monitoring by the borough council. 27 DOWN YOUR WAY TANDRIDGE DESPITE BEING SO near to London, the Tandridge District is very rural and over 90% is covered by Green Belt. The area borders Reigate and Redhill in the west, Croydon in the north, Westerham and Sevenoaks in the east and East Grinstead in the south. It is a district of contrasts with busy commuter towns and leafy villages, beautiful countryside, conservation areas, nature reserves and places of interest. Lingfield is home to a racecourse and Nutfield to Redhill Aerodrome. The lack of any single large settlement to provide a focus for traffic and its resulting pollution means that there are 28 few areas of concern in terms of urban traffic pollution. Caterham can be busy, as can Oxted and Warlingham, but not sufficiently to prompt air quality fears. Perhaps the worst location is Whyteleafe, where busy A22 traffic passes within yards of peoples’ front doors. But even here, pollution levels will not breach air quality standards. Traffic levels on the M25 orbital are lower than on western stretches of the motorway near Heathrow, and pollution levels in villages close to the motorway, such as Godstone, are within the Government’s objectives for 2005. Similarly, no problems are expected in the village of Smallfield that borders the M23 motorway. With few industrial polluters of note – only activities in neighbouring districts need mentioning. A planned incinerator in Redhill will cause concern to some – but controls over emissions should ensure that there will not be a risk to health downwind in Caterham. The planned expansion of Gatwick Airport could also cause a rise in nitrogen dioxide emissions, but it is unlikely that these will rise sufficiently for health effects to be breached in settlements such as Smallfield. There are few properties in Tandridge that are sufficiently close to busy traffic to cause concern. Outwood windmill typifies the rural nature of Tandridge SURREY: YOUR AIR SURREY’S MOST RURAL borough is the furthest away from London – but does not escape traffic problems. Traffic heading for the coast down the A3 frequently hits congestion at the single carriageway section at the Devil’s Punchbowl, and Hindhead traffic lights. Traffic jams can stretch back for miles, with consequent increases in pollution. There are plans to tunnel a new road underneath the protected Devil’s Punchbowl site which will reduce congestion, and take the emissions further away from sensitive properties – but until then, fumes from congested traffic can build up at Hindhead streets particularly near the Punchbowl Hotel and the crossroads. Other towns in the borough such as Farnham and Haslemere also suffer congestion as a result of shoppers and commuters converging on their centres. At Farnham and Godalming the council has installed pollution monitors to find out how far the pollution stretches. In East Street, Farnham, monitors show that nitrogen dioxide levels are relatively high – but these will drop to below Government thresholds before 2005 as vehicles become steadily cleaner with improved technology. WAVERLEY SURREY: YOUR AIR Farnham and Hindhead streets are often congested, and their steep canyon-like sides can trap the pollution which can build up to high levels 29 DOWN YOUR WAY WOKING THE MODERN TOWN of Woking has succeeded in becoming a bustling shopping centre and prime office location based on the town’s excellent railway links. The borough also includes main local centres of Byfleet and West Byfleet to the east, and Knapshill to the west surrounded by open countryside containing a number of villages. The success in growing Woking has not been without its problems. Shopping and commuter car trips to the centre create congestion and increased vehicle emissions. Guildford Road in Woking sees some 26,000 vehicles passing every day. Traffic 30 emissions can get trapped by neighbouring buildings, and Woking Borough Council has tested nitrogen dioxide here and found it to be 24 units – higher than desirable, but this is expected to drop within the next few years to more acceptable levels as vehicles become cleaner. Predictably the highest traffic flows – and hence emissions – can be found on the M25 motorway which clips the north east of the borough and carries 130,000 vehicles per day. But few people live very close to the motorway. More worrying are routes through the borough to the M25 – such as Parvis Road that carries 42,000 vehicles a Woking town centre has become a shopping centre in its own right, attracting many shoppers by car. Woking’s excellent rail service also attracts car commuters, increasing traffic, congestion and fumes day – and are close to houses. But even here monitoring shows nitrogen dioxide levels at 23 units, a figure again that is predicted to drop as vehicles get cleaner. There is little industry in the area that will affect air quality. The Walker AEC plant in Byfleet is used for plating metals, but potential emissions are tightly controlled. The Woking Crematorium in Brookwood and the James Walker rubber and textile coating works in Old Woking are similarly authorised on the basis of minimal emissions. Woking residents are however keeping a watchful eye on a proposed incinerator in nearby Guildford. SURREY: YOUR AIR HOW TO FIND OUT MORE: HEALTH EFFECTS Air pollution: what exactly is it? The air that we breathe is a complex mixture of gases and dusts (particles). Some are benign, for instance carbon dioxide and nitrogen are naturally present in air, while others can have adverse health effects – such as lead, benzene and dioxins. The following pages describe the pollutants that affect Surrey – and finally global warming, where the world climate (rather than local air quality) is being damaged by human activity. For those that are susceptible to pollution, peaks of air pollution can cause breathing difficulties, coughing and eye irritation. There are various sources of information predicting when this might happen, pollution forecasts are broadcast on TV, radio, the internet and a freephone hotline. These sources give a one to ten index of pollution levels that indicate when it is a good idea to stay indoors. Details on page 35. It is worth saying that current medical evidence suggests that while asthma may be worsened by air pollution, it does not cause asthma in the first instance. Interestingly some of the highest asthma incidence rates in the UK are in the Scottish Islands – where there is little traffic pollution. This suggests that other issues, such as SURREY: YOUR AIR indoor allergens, diet and modern lifestyles might be a more likely culprit. There are also longer term effects where constant exposures to air pollutants can shorten your life. Particles (smoke) Particles are the term used to describe solid matter suspended in the air, anything from visible dust to very tiny microscopic particles that typically come from vehicle engines. Particles are perhaps the most difficult pollutant to fully understand, not least because the particles that you can see – dust, smoke, black diesel soot – are not as serious as they look. These particles are so large that the throat filters them out before they reach the lung. Such particles lodge on nose hairs and the throat, and are expelled as sputum, which is then swallowed. More worrying is that modern high technology diesel and petrol engines produce very, very fine particles which are invisible to the naked eye. These particles are very light and form blankets that can cover entire continents, particularly in winter when the air is stagnant. These particles are so fine that they are not intercepted by the upper lung, and pass right into the deepest lung cavities and become absorbed in the lung wall. Uncontrolled fires causing black smoke are clearly unhealthy They then stay there long enough to damage the body. Experts are arguing exactly how that damage is caused. Some believe the particles can enter the bloodstream and cause heart problems. Others believe that particles, which are themselves made up of all sorts of different chemicals and substances, can confuse the immune system and inflame the lungs. Estimates suggest that particles could cause 12,00024,000 early deaths a year (out of 500,000 deaths a year in total in the UK), and shorten the average life by weeks – or years for the most susceptible. They can also cause day-today breathing difficulties and worsen (but not cause) asthma. Particle emissions are dropping dramatically as diesel engines become cleaner, and older vehicles are scrapped. But new ideas will be needed to prevent the very fine particle emissions of both petrol and diesel engines of the future. Sulphur dioxide Sulphur dioxide is a gas of reducing importance as environmental clean-up regulations begin to bite. Sulphur dioxide, mostly from coal burning, is a corrosive and choking gas that was the main ingredient of the smogs of the industrial revolution and the Great 31 HOW TO FIND OUT MORE: HEALTH EFFECTS London smog of December 1952 that directly led to 4,000 deaths. That smog prompted the setting up of Smoke Control Areas where domestic coal burning was banned, and very quickly urban air was cleaned up. Today, in the UK, power stations are the only major source of sulphur dioxide, and these are regulated so tightly that health standards are rarely breached. Surrey is particularly lucky in this respect – the nearest power stations are on the South Coast, Thames Estuary and Oxfordshire, too distant to affect local residents. Nitrogen dioxide Any combustion – whether it be crude bonfires, or the most sophisticated burning in a vehicle engine – produces oxides of nitrogen, sometimes called NOx. It is formed as the nitrogen and oxygen in the air join together when burnt. 45% of NOx derives from road vehicles – far more in city centres. For Surrey, town centres, particularly ‘canyon’ streets surrounded by tall shops, can harbour high concentrations of 32 NOx. And motorways produce large quantities, but these can die down within 100m of the verge. Once emitted, the NOx does not hang around long, it quickly absorbs more oxygen to form nitrogen dioxide (NO2). It can also form particles, nitric acid and in sunny weather it can also form ground level ozone Nitrogen dioxide irritates the lungs causing shortness of breath, worsening of asthma and other breathing difficulties. It is difficult to control concentrations of this pollutant as NOx is still emitted in modern, efficient engines than older engines, be they car, bus, lorry or airplane engines. Fuel quality and engine technology is therefore not producing the dramatic emissions reductions as has been seen with particles or sulphur dioxide. Traffic reductions are therefore the key to reducing emissions. Because of nitrogen dioxide, four Surrey boroughs – Runnymede, Spelthorne, Surrey Heath and Reigate and Banstead – are set to declare all or part of their districts and boroughs as air quality management areas. Ozone can have a direct effect on how far you can see. This can spoil the amenity of beauty spots such as Box Hill and Leith Hill which are famous for their views Ozone Ozone is a puzzling pollutant for many. Most people have heard of the gas because of the issue of the depletion of the ozone layer by aerosols. Here’s the contradiction – ozone can be good and bad. Atmospheric ozone – high in the sky – is beneficial to the earth, as the ozone layer filters out ultra violet rays that can cause skin cancer. Ozone depleting chemicals such as CFCs found in aerosols have caused a serious ‘hole’ in the ozone layer. Regulations have banned the production of CFCs and they are to be phased out. But the same gas at ground level is not beneficial to us – too much ozone is poisonous and can irritate the lungs. At ground level, ozone is formed chemically from volatile organic compounds and vehicle pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide, especially in strong sunlight, causing summer smogs. Such smogs can impact the whole continent and can last weeks if there is no strong wind to blow them away. Ozone damages the lungs by oxidising lung tissue and SURREY: YOUR AIR can irritate the eyes. Asthmatics and those with preexisting breathing difficulties are most at risk, and it is wise to avoid outdoor exercise – or going outside altogether – during summer smog alerts. Surrey, being located in the warmer part of Britain, is particularly at risk from summer smogs. Because the pollution is of such a widespread regional nature, it is extremely difficult to tackle on a local basis. Local authorities are therefore not required by law to produce plans to reduce ozone – we have to leave it to Europe. Lead Like sulphur dioxide, lead is very much yesterday’s problem. Lead finds its way into the atmosphere as tiny particles, which are breathed in and then absorbed into the bloodstream. The lead accumulates in the body, and causes learning difficulties, particularly in children. Lead is used in petrol to improve combustion, and once it was known that lead was causing the health effects alongside busy roads and in SURREY: YOUR AIR All burning produces dioxins, regulators ensure they come in small quantities Leaded petrol (below) is now banned from retail sale in the UK towns, legislators moved to reduce lead in petrol. This was carried out gradually, so that by 2000, it was banned altogether, and lead levels in the atmosphere are now negligible. Toxics and other pollutants Carbon monoxide is emitted by vehicle engines (and domestic heaters if there isn’t enough ventilation). The gas is lethal at high concentrations, particularly indoors. 75% of outdoor UK emissions derive from road vehicles – the vast majority from petrol engines, although total emissions are reducing with the fitting of catalytic converters. Carbon monoxide, is colourless and odourless, and affects health by preventing blood from absorbing oxygen. Outdoors, dispersion is rapid and there are no areas of Surrey where carbon monoxide levels are worrying. There is a family of gases that can be grouped together as toxic by virtue of their especially severe health effects. But just as their effects are acute, so their usual concentrations in the air are low. Substances include: Benzene: found in petrol, petrol vehicle exhaust and near petrol filling stations, oil refineries, and airports. It has been known to cause leukaemia among workers exposed to high levels, but day to day concentrations are low across Surrey, even near higher risk areas such as Heathrow and Gatwick airports. 1,3 Butadiene: This gas is a by-product of combustion of petrol and diesel – road vehicles produce 78% of UK emissions. Like benzene, 1,3 butadiene can cause bone marrow cancer and leukaemia, and derives from fuel processing, but is not a particular problem in Surrey. Dioxins: Dioxins are produced in most combustion operations, whether it be garden bonfires, fireworks, vehicle engines or municipal waste incinerators, especially where there is low temperature (less than 800 deg C) or partial burning of plastic and rubber. Dioxins are especially toxic even at very low levels, and can affect the immune system. Controls on incinerators are now such that emissions are extremely low. 33 HOW TO FIND OUT MORE: GLOBAL WARMING Carbon dioxide and global warming gases Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant, rather a global warming gas. The distinction is important – carbon dioxide is all around us in large quantities, and is not poisonous. There are very real effects on the global environment, however. Scientists can argue who is to blame, but it is certain that the world is heating up and that carbon dioxide levels are rising at an alarming rate and are now higher than at any other time in the last 500,000 years. Most human activity leads to emissions of carbon dioxide, whether it be through driving cars, using domestic central heating or even breathing! We can’t stop breathing, but we can reduce our consumption of fossil fuels which directly reduces carbon dioxide emissions. Individuals can ‘do their bit’ to reduce climate change by cutting down on energy use, which in many cases will have knock-on benefits for local air pollution. 34 Choice of more efficient cars is fundamental in reducing carbon dioxide emissions – diesels are more efficient than petrol, but diesel engines produce more local pollutants (see below). There exist many other global warming gases – gases which linger in the atmosphere having the effect of warming up the planet. These include methane found in natural gas, and industrial chemicals. Global warming v pollution: petrol v diesel Global warming is blamed for extreme weather conditions – the price for too much traffic pollution led the Government to ramp up diesel duty forcing a switch back to petrol. The diesel engine, which has been relatively undeveloped compared to the petrol engine, is only now catching up and modern diesels are frugal and much cleaner. The latest cars, such as the Peugeot 607 HDi are being fitted with a particulate trap to reduce emissions still further. Growing climate change fears and tough international carbon dioxide emission targets has prompted a resurgence of diesel sales and the choice between petrol and diesel will be even more difficult. As a rule of thumb, if you have the choice, avoid diesels if you regularly drive in already polluted urban areas, such as London. In rural areas where pollutants dissipate more rapidly, the climate change benefits of diesels outweigh the pollution disadvantages. This is particularly true for short local runs – eg the school run – where petrol car emissions are high because the catalyst is too cold to work effectively. Surrey has a huge car ownership, and that is not going to change overnight, even if it were desirable. So what should a green driver choose as their fuel? There is no easy answer to this question, and as our lifestyle changes, so does official advice. In the early 1990s, global warming was perceived to be a bigger issue than local pollution, and diesel duty was low to encourage use of the more fuel efficient diesel technology. But in the late 1990s, fears about particle SURREY: YOUR AIR HOW TO FIND OUT MORE: USEFUL CONTACTS Local government: Surrey’s boroughs and districts ELMBRIDGE (page 20) EPSOM AND EWELL (page 21) GUILDFORD (page 22) MOLE VALLEY (page 23) REIGATE AND BANSTEAD (page 24) RUNNYMEDE (page 25) SPELTHORNE (page 26) SURREY HEATH (page 27) TANDRIDGE (page 28) WAVERLEY (page 29) WOKING (page 30) 01372 474753 01372 732404 01483 444374 01306 885001 01737 276401 01932 425710 01784 446259 01276 707359 01883 732841 01483 869486 01483 743653 www.elmbridge.gov.uk www.epsom-ewell.gov.uk/ www.guildford.gov.uk www.molevalley.gov.uk www.reigate-banstead.gov.uk/ www.runnymede.gov.uk www.spelthorne.gov.uk www.surreyheath.gov.uk www.tandridge.gov.uk www.waverley.gov.uk www.woking.gov.uk Central government ENVIRONMENT DEPARTMENT (DEFRA) 020 7944 3000 www.defra.gov.uk ENVIRONMENT AGENCY: 0845 9333111 (regulates the larger industrial processes and monitors pollution) www.environment- agency.gov.uk Useful websites NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR CLEAN AIR 01273 878770 www.nsca.org.uk (bonfire codes of practice, information on incinerators) NETCEN (website provides searchable and detailed air quality data for your area) www.aeat.co.uk/netcen/airqual ARIC AIR QUALITY ENCYCLOPEDIA (very good information and factsheets on air quality) www.doc.mmu.ac.uk/aric/eae/ SUSSEX AIR QUALITY NET (provides good air quality coverage to the south of Surrey) www.sussex-air.net DON’T CHOKE BRITAIN (information on cutting emissions) www.dcb.org.uk Pressure groups FRIENDS OF THE EARTH GREENPEACE 020 7490 1555 020 7865 8100 www.foe.co.uk www.greenpeace.org.uk Further information Most borough air quality review and assessments contain detailed information about the pollutants found in Surrey. The most comprehensive account is the Department of Health Handbook on Air Pollution and Health available from The Stationery Office. A large number of helpful and detailed reports are available free from the Department of Health website www.doh.gov.uk/hef/airpol/airpolh.htm Key stage 3 teaching pack Surrey County Council Environmental Programme Unit 020 8541 9432 (available to schools only) Pollution forecasts: official hourly air pollution information can be found on: CEEFAX pages 410-417; TELETEXT page 155; freephone 0800 556677; or www.aeat.co.uk/netcen/airqual/bulletin SURREY: YOUR AIR 35 MILLENNIUM AIR REPORT is produced by the Surrey Chief Environmental Officers Group and Surrey district and borough councils Further copies price £9.50, are available from: Robert Muir Tandridge District Council, Directorate of Environmental Protection, Council Offices, Station Road East, Oxted, Surrey, RH8 0BT Tel: 01883 732841 Printed by Horsham Press, Mulberry Trading Estate, Foundry Lane, Horsham, West Sussex RH13 5PX Copyright 2001 Surrey Chief Environmental Officers Group Produced by Jack Pease. Design by Mark Alderson
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