Pavilionaire
Well-known member
- Jul 7, 2003
- 31,269
I got done driving to Stratford to see the Abba Voyage show. From Ulez Booo to Voulez-Vous in a matter of minutes
You might be amazed how charging unthinking motorists £12 a day would change their behaviour, maybe focus their minds a little before just jumping in their two ton pollution generator for a trip to the shops. Supermarkets charging 5p a carrier bag reduced usage by about 85% overnightNot sure how paying £12 a day is going to reduce the air quality. If they are really that concerned it would be a no you cannot bring that vehicle into London.
Thousands of planes flying very low in and out of West London/East London daily seems more of a pollution risk than Johns ten year old transit.
Looks like you've met your Waterloo.I got done driving to Stratford to see the Abba Voyage show. From Ulez Booo to Voulez-Vous in a matter of minutes
was it the 5p charge or the supermarkets stopped having carrier bags? i recall the number of "bag-for-life" rocketed and total amount of plastic increased as a result. of course the £12 charge will work a fair bit around the edges, with shops near the boundrysee trade drop. it wont stop the sort that pop to the shops from doing so, they'll just go to different shops, even if further away.You might be amazed how charging unthinking motorists £12 a day would change their behaviour, maybe focus their minds a little before just jumping in their two ton pollution generator for a trip to the shops. Supermarkets charging 5p a carrier bag reduced usage by about 85% overnight
ThisNot sure how paying £12 a day is going to reduce the air quality. If they are really that concerned it would be a no you cannot bring that vehicle into London.
Thousands of planes flying very low in and out of West London/East London daily seems more of a pollution risk than Johns ten year old transit.
The good thing about planes is they move around at several 100/1000 m above ground where no on lives, or walks and emissions can be quick to disperse. Would be more of an issue if they were flying around 1 m above ground...Not sure how paying £12 a day is going to reduce the air quality. If they are really that concerned it would be a no you cannot bring that vehicle into London.
Thousands of planes flying very low in and out of West London/East London daily seems more of a pollution risk than Johns ten year old transit.
Not for Warwick Davies.The good thing about planes is they move around at several 100/1000 m above ground where no on lives, or walks and emissions can be quick to disperse. Would be more of an issue if they were flying around 1 m above ground...
The Johnson policy was to introduce it in central London where public transport goes everywhere. Expanding it to the suburbs where public transport is more patchy, is more of a problem.And that's what makes me laugh and pisses me off in equal measure. It was a Johnson Mayoral policy to introduce the one currently in place and a lot of voters were for it. Then all of a sudden they want to expand it and it'll now affect same voters and they're screaming foul, it's a conspiracy to bring in pay per mile blah blah blah. Will it make a huge difference? Only time will tell, but better than doing bugger all.
It would definitely be an issue if they were flying 1m above the ground. A bit of pollution would be the least of our worries.The good thing about planes is they move around at several 100/1000 m above ground where no on lives, or walks and emissions can be quick to disperse. Would be more of an issue if they were flying around 1 m above ground...
Just buy one of these then
The Johnson policy was to introduce it in central London where public transport goes everywhere. Expanding it to the suburbs where public transport is more patchy, is more of a problem.
The other issue of course is the tiny signs as mentioned in the OP, which if you don't see them means a £180 fine. That's pure profiteering. A fairer way would be to send a bill with a maximum £5 admin fee and only if that's ignored could you ramp it up to big money.
And it doesn't help that numerous places have their own different rules. Manchester has signs up saying that there may be a charge for certain vehicles entering the city or its suburbs, but doesn't say which vehicles and also doesn't say that it has not yet been introduced. Unless you know the area well, you need to either go home a google everywhere you've been, or else you need to be ready for a swingeing bill.
whoever is promotting ULEZ need to do a better job at explaining only 10% of vehicles that will use the zone are liable for the chargeGreat news today.
All the hoo-ha will blow over, only effects 10% of vehicles and was for once the Tories came up with a great idea, credit to Labour for delivering on it.
A few round the edges aren't happy, but they've had plenty of time to change their vehicle.