UK
smog alert: vulnerable people advised to stay indoors
Warning
comes as air pollution is expected to reach eight or nine on a
10-point scale in much of southern UK
2
April, 2014
Millions
of vulnerable people in southern England and Wales were advised to
stay indoors as unusually high levels of air pollution
smothered London and other cities, just weeks after heavy pollution
led to restrictions on car use and the offer of free public transport
in Brussels and Paris.
Prof
Frank Kelly of King's College London said tiny particles of pollution
could cause problems for some people – such as those with asthma –
and contribute to longer-term problems for others.
"Periods
of very high pollution in London arise usually because the city's
normal pollution emissions are increased further by polluted air
arriving on light winds from neighbouring areas such as northern
Europe," he said. "However, whether home-produced or
arriving from the continent, the tiny particles we take into our
bodies with each breath cause immediate problems for some
individuals, such as those with asthma, and contribute to longer-term
problems for most of us in the form of heart disease and stroke."
Leanne
Stewart, from Eltham in south-east London, described feeling
breathless after a routine half-mile walk to her son's thisschool
yesterday morning.
"I've
been doing the usual school run about half a mile from my house,
which is usually quite an easy walk, but I'm still breathless now,"
she said. "I could feel my chest getting tighter and tighter and
my son, who's eight, had to stop and have his inhaler.
"I
went light-headed and had to get a bus back. It's only half a mile
and I usually do it twice a day, no problem. I've never had that
problem before. My son felt like the air wasn't getting into his
lungs so I'm worried about him today, but I've just texted him and he
said he's fine."
Experts
said this week's air pollution was not unusual for this time of year,
but the difference was that the public was being informed because of
the Met Office's new forecasting system.
"Two
weeks ago, when the air pollution map of the south-east turned red,
no one was informed," said Dr Ian Mudway, lecturer in
respiratory toxicology at King's College London. "The BBC ran
stories about the pollution in Paris and Milan, but no one thought it
worthwhile to inform the British public that they were being exposed
to dangerous levels of fine particulates [tiny pieces of liquid or
solid matter].
Daily
air quality index for 2 April 2014. Source: Defra
"At-risk
groups were not informed, which to my mind is unforgivable. My
suspicion was that there was an almost 'what the public don't know
they can't complain about' attitude. Thanks to the new forecast, air
pollution is going to ratchet very rapidly up the public
consciousness and it will be interesting to see how government, both
local and national, responds."
On
1 April, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Defra) handed over responsibility for reporting air pollution to the
Met Office, a move welcomed by Alan Andrews at the environmental law
firm ClientEarth.
"I
think it has to be a good thing, because the Met Office are good at
communicating to the public and it depoliticises it; it takes away
the issue of a minister worrying about looking bad because of putting
out a pollution warning."
Forecasters
warned that one of the year's worst smogs would worsen as Wednesday
progressed, with air pollution reaching the maximum "very high"
level in many parts of southern Britain.
The
unusually high levels of air pollution are a result of inland
pollution and powerful dust storms swept in from the Sahara by strong
gales.
"We
usually see this happen several times a year when big dust storms in
the Sahara coincide with southerly winds to bring that dust here,"
said Paul Hutcheon at the Met Office. "More dust rain is
possible during showers expected later this week."
Defra
said air-pollution levels on Wednesday were expected to reach eight
or nine on a 10-point scale in much of southern England, the Midlands
and southern Wales.
The
south coast is forecast to see pollution hit the maximum level 10.
Adults
and children with lung problems, heart defects and older people are
being urged to avoid any strenuous activity and asthmatics have been
told to use their inhaler more often.
Advice
on the Defra website for the general population facing "very
high" pollution levels states: "Reduce physical exertion,
particularly outdoors, especially if you experience symptoms such as
a cough or sore throat."
Defra
forecasters issued the fresh warning after air pollution levels
reached 10 in north-west Norfolk on Tuesday.
"For
England and Wales, moderate to high air-pollution levels are forecast
for central and south-east England, to the south and east of a line
from around the Wash to Cheshire to east Devon, with local very high
levels expected in parts of East Anglia and the East Midlands,"
said a Defra forecaster.
Conditions
are expected to worsen on Wednesday evening and into Thursday as the
smog extends north.
High
levels of pollution are forecast to stretch across East Anglia, the
Midlands, Lincolnshire, Wirral and north and east Wales, then further
north over much of England's north-west coast, south-west Scotland
and the north-east of Northern Ireland.
Cleaner
air from the Atlantic should bring some respite for south-west Wales
and England's southernmost counties on Thursday, forecasters said,
although many other parts of England and Wales will experience higher
levels of smog than usual.
Keith
Taylor, the Green party's MEP for south-east England, said the high
level of pollution showed
the need for stronger government action.
"Episodes
like this often have a number of contributing factors," he said.
"What seems clear is that towns and cities across south-east
England need to reduce the level of air pollution in their streets by
cutting the amount of traffic. But on top of that it's clear that our
government must play a role in pushing for stronger air pollution
laws from the European Union, rather than trying to water down the
rules we already have."
The
UK faces
fines of up to £300m
a year and embarrassing court appearances after the European
commission launched legal proceedings against it for failing to
reduce "excessive" levels of nitrogen dioxide air pollution
from traffic, despite 15 years of warnings and several extensions and
postponements granted to the government.
According
to the World Health Organisation, air pollution has become the
world's
single biggest environmental health risk,
linked to about 7 million deaths a year – or nearly one in eight
deaths in 2012.
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