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CLEAR THE AIR

Hundreds of thousands of drivers face paying £12.50 fee as Clean Air Zone expands in months – will you be affected?

ALMOST 700,000 car drivers in London will face a daily £12.50 Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) fee a day when the scheme expands, according to new analysis.

The RAC, which carried out the research, said the expansion of the zone from August 29 will have a "massive financial impact on motorists and businesses”.

Transport for London's (TFL) new signposts for the new Ultra Low Emissions Zone (ULEZ) have been erected around the inner orbital road perimeter around the capital, and seen on the South Circular in East Dulwich on the day that the new area becomes effective for newer vehicles, on 25th October 2021, in London, England. Now 18 times larger, the new ULEZ area bans older vehicles such as polluting diesels and petrol cars older than 2006, an attempt to lower poisonous emissions that further harm the health of 1 in 10 children who have asthma. Drivers of non-exempt vehicles may enter the ULEZ after paying a £12.50 daily fee - or face a £160 penalty. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
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More drivers will have to pay the £12.50 chargeCredit: Getty
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JUNE 03: (EMBARGOED FOR PUBLICATION IN UK NEWSPAPERS UNTIL 24 HOURS AFTER CREATE DATE AND TIME) Mayor of London Sadiq Khan attends a National Service of Thanksgiving to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II at St Paul's Cathedral on June 3, 2022 in London, England. The Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II is being celebrated from June 2 to June 5, 2022, in the UK and Commonwealth to mark the 70th anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth II on 6 February 1952. (Photo by Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)
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Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan is behind the ULEZ expansionCredit: Getty

It comes a day after Transport for London (TfL) claimed that nine out of 10 cars seen driving in outer London on an average day meet the ULEZ standards, so will not be liable for the charge.

It also said that many drivers are switching from older, more polluting vehicles ahead of the expansion.

The zone is currently limited to the area within London's North and South Circular roads, but Mayor Sadiq Khan has decided to expand it to cover the whole of the capital, claiming this will boost air quality.

Most diesel cars registered before September 2015 and petrol cars registered prior to January 2006 are liable for the charge.

READ MORE ON ULEZ HERE

Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency figures obtained by the RAC show that 691,559 licensed cars in the whole of London fall into one of those categories.

This does not take into account other vehicles such as vans and lorries, or vehicles which enter London from neighbouring counties such as Essex, Hertfordshire, Surrey and Kent.

RAC head of roads policy Nicholas Lyes said: "Cleaning up London's air should undoubtedly be a priority, but the sheer number of vehicles that don't meet ULEZ emissions standards in Greater London suggests there will be a massive financial impact on motorists and businesses through having to fork out £12.50 every day they drive in the zone.

"We desperately need more co-ordination between the mayor and the Government to help small businesses, tradespeople, NHS staff and carers who have no choice but to drive into the expanded ULEZ  for work purposes from outside Greater London.

"Consideration should also be given to those who work at night when public transport is greatly reduced in the outer boroughs."

TfL is running a scrappage scheme for vehicles that do not comply with the ULEZ standards.

It includes payments of up to £2,000 for eligible drivers such as those on low incomes or the disabled scrapping a car, and up to £9,500 for charities, sole traders and small businesses scrapping or retrofitting vans and minibuses.

Mr Lyes urged Mr Khan to consider delaying charges by a year for certain key workers, or a scheme where TfL partners with a leasing company to provide discounted ULEZ-compliant vehicles to small businesses and traders.

He went on: "Changing to a compliant vehicle at such short notice simply won't be something many will be able to afford, especially during a cost-of-living crisis and at a time when second-hand car prices are so high.

"We need more creativity from London's mayor and his team to help people out as the current scrappage scheme is akin to using a plughole to drain an Olympic-sized swimming pool.

"It's simply not big enough for the scale of the job."

Mr Khan said on Thursday that the aim of the ULEZ is to "get the most polluting vehicles off our roads in order to protect both the health of Londoners and our environment".

He went on: "People, businesses and charities understand the impact of air pollution on health and are preparing for the change.

"It's now just one in 10 cars seen driving in outer London that aren't ULEZ compliant - a fantastic result.

Read More on The Sun

"We expect the number of compliant vehicles to go up even more as people prepare for the expansion, but we know there is more to do to ensure every Londoner can breathe cleaner air.

"For drivers of the very few non-compliant vehicles, I have launched the biggest scrappage scheme ever."

SAN FRANCISCO - JANUARY 2: Exhaust billows out of a car tailpipe January 2, 2008 in San Francisco, California. California sued the EPA after the federal agency stepped in to block a new state emissions law. Fifteen other states joined in the lawsuit with California. (Photo by David Paul Morris/Getty Images)
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The aim of the expanded ULEZ is designed to improve air qualityCredit: Getty
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