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Utrecht plans to tackle air pollution with larger zero-emission zones

Utrecht plans to tackle air pollution with larger zero-emission zones

The municipality of Utrecht has presented plans that would improve the air quality of the city. By expanding the zero-emission zone and banning wood-burning stoves and fireplaces, the Dutch city is taking steps towards a healthier environment.

Utrecht takes further steps towards emission-free city

As the largest source of pollution in Utrecht, traffic is one of the main targets for reduction. The municipality wants a step-by-step expansion of the environmental and zero-emission zones. For example, vehicles that run on diesel such as cars, vans, trucks, and buses that do not meet the set emission standards, will no longer be allowed in the whole of Utrecht from 2027. Currently, the environmental zone in Utrecht only applies to the city centre.

From 2030, the zero-emission zone will be expanded to include all vans and trucks, as well as mopeds and scooters, throughout the city. This would mean that only drivers with vehicles that produce no harmful emissions will be allowed on the roads in Utrecht.

According to the municipality, wood burning is one of the biggest sources of polluting particulate matter. As one of the only causes of pollution that hasn’t seen a decrease in emissions in the past few years, the city plans on banning all new flues in housing that is newly built as they work towards a city completely free from wood-burning by 2030. 

Reducing emissions for “healthy air” in Utrecht

Particulate matter from burning wood and nitrogen dioxide emitted from diesel vehicles pollutes the air and is harmful to the health of people, nature and the environment. For this reason, the city wants to go further than the legal European standards to achieve the stricter World Health Organisation (WHO) advisory values from 2021.

“We are raising the bar to protect the health of Utrecht residents,” stated Alderman Eva Oosters. “Air pollution has a huge impact, from lung problems to cardiovascular diseases. Clean air is not a luxury, but a necessity.” 

The city’s plans have been presented in a policy document to the council which will decide on them later and announce an implementation programme. “These steps, such as the wood burning ban and the expansion of the environmental zone, are ambitious but essential,” said Oosters.

Simone Jacobs

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Simone Jacobs

Editor for the Netherlands at IamExpat Media. Simone studied Genetics and Zoology at the Univeristy of Pretoria in South Africa before moving to the Netherlands, where she has been working...

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