Saturday, March 15, 2014

Smog-Covered Paris Offers Free Public Transportation In Bid To Reduce Pollution

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/03/15/3409951/smog-paris-public-transport/

By Ryan Koronowski on March 15, 2014

Unseasonably warm weather and too much dangerous pollution have led to some drastic response measures in Europe this weekend.

In a bid to cut down on smog, Parisians don’t have to pay a thing to take public transportation, as recent shocking levels of air pollution have left the City of Lights looking like Beijing or Shanghai. Paris police lowered the speed limit and asked people not to burn wood in fireplaces. Authorities asked factories and trucks with heavy loads to reduce activity. Free bus and subway rides began on Friday morning, and are scheduled to end on Sunday.

“Public transportation” in Paris does not just mean subways and buses. Paris has two bike- and electric car-sharing systems that are free this weekend, which have grown popular in recent years.

On Friday, the Air Quality Index hit 185 in Paris, similar to levels in Beijing. On Saturday, air pollution levels seemed to have dropped in Paris and London, though Lyon was still in the red.

The French Health Ministry warned the elderly, children, pregnant women, and those with difficulty breathing were especially at risk during the days-long “maximum pollution alert.”

The smog stretched from France’s Atlantic coast through Belgium, and well into Germany. Authorities warned Greater London that pollution monitors hit a 10 out of 10 — “very high” — due to pollution blowing in from the continent, and a high pressure system trapping stale air in the city.

In addition to high pressure air, warmer weather in Europe has also caused pollution levels to spike. While parts of the continental U.S. got hit with cold Arctic air this month, much of continental Europe recorded higher-than-average temperatures leading to potentially one of the warmest winters in 250 years, according to meteorologist Volker Ermert from the Institute of Geophysics and Meteorology at the University of Cologne.

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Late last year, the World Health Organization’s cancer agency announced it had sufficient evidence to classify outdoor air pollution as “carcinogenic to humans.” Particulate matter is a major component of outdoor air pollution and is also known to cause cancer — mainly lung cancer but also bladder cancer.

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