Asthma + Lung UK Scotland have published a report titled ‘Clearing the Air: Transport + Lung Health’ report, which makes 10 recommendations they believe would decrease the harmful effects of transport in the country.
Among these are suggestions to adopt the 2021 WHO air quality guidelines as legal targets, scrap peak rail fares, increase the fine for vehicle idling and, more significantly, enforce it.
Scotland already has a lower limit for annual mean PM2.5 than England (10μg/m³ compared to 20μg/m³) but the report suggests reducing this further to meet the WHW limit of 5 μg/m³.
Similarly, it suggests lowering the limit for annual mean NO2 from 40μg/m³ to 20μg/m³.
Currently, the report reveals, less than half of monitoring sites would meet the suggested limits for PM2.5 and just over two-thirds would meet them for NO2.
The charity are also concerned by the monitoring network itself, leading them to recommend that the number of automatic monitoring sites across Scotland be increased, with an emphasis on locating then near schools and hospitals. Live data should also be used to alert GP surgeries, hospitals and schools when air quality deteriorates.
The report also takes aim at vehicle idling, revealing that despite 1,158 complaints being made to 20 councils about idling over the last three and a half years, only one fine has actually been issued (by South Lanarkshire Council in 2022).
Asthma + Lung Scotland say of this: ‘We would like to see the Scottish Government update its guidance to reflect public opinion that vehicle idling is a nuisance, harmful to public health and the environment by ensuring that all councils enforce idling bans. We believe that the £20 fixed penalty notice is not a strong deterrent. This should be increased in line with other fixed penalty notices for motoring and environmental offences.’
The ten recommendations are:
The full report can be read here.