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Parisians Can Breathe, A Little

Published 03/17/2014, 10:19 AM
Updated 03/17/2014, 10:30 AM
Parisians Can Breathe, A Little

By Angelo Young - After several days of pollution levels typical of giant, fast-growing Chinese cities, Paris city officials began the week with car driving restrictions unseen for 17 years in Europe but part of day-to-day life in Mexico City and Beijing.

On Monday, only private passenger cars and motorcycles with license plates ending with an odd number were allowed to circulate after the city offered free public transportation through the weekend. If the car ban continues on Tuesday, it will be car owners with even-numbered plates that will have their turn on the roads. Electric car owners and cars carrying three or more passengers are exempt.

© Reuters. Police officers control cars with even-numbered licence plates which are not allowed to drive today, at Porte Maillot in Paris March 17, 2014. France deployed hundreds of police in Paris on Monday to enforce the most drastic curbs on car use in 20 years as authorities sought to reduce health-endangering pollution days before town hall elections. Amid concerns of a worsening air quality after a week when unseasonably balmy weather boosted pollution, public transport was free of charge while drivers with even-numbered licence plates were told to leave their cars at home of face fines.

Officials responded after the Paris metro area saw pollution exceed safe levels for five consecutive days last week thanks to a perfect-storm combination of low precipitation and wind speeds and mild daytime temperatures coupled with cool nights. These conditions keep carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and lung-irritating, carcinogenic micro-particles low to the ground rather than dissipated into the atmosphere.

© IBTimes using metropolitan air quality readings. On Friday, Paris was choking under levels of air pollution typical of mega-cities in the developing world. But on Monday, Paris' Air Quality Index had dropped significantly. Check out Friday's readings below.

Check out Monday’s Air Quality Index (AQI) readings for Paris compared to a dozen other cities. Below that is the same comparison from Friday. Mondays typically have the lowest pollution readings because of reduced industrial and vehicular activity over the weekend, and these two charts show just how much the weekend and free public transport helped get Paris’ air back down to levels typical of urban areas. Also notice how Shanghai, Hong Kong and New Delhi saw their levels fall, but still in the area considered unhealthy.

© IBTimes using metropolitan AQI data. Here was AQI readings on Friday for Paris and 12 other cities.

Mexico City was the first to impose a permanent car-circulation program, in 1989. The program, called “Hoy No Circula” uses the odd-even number policy coupled with color-coded license plates to limit passenger car use. Between that and increased factory emission inspections, the city has managed to reel in pollution levels significantly over the past 25 years.

While pollution routinely hits unhealthy levels in the Mexican capital and its surrounding urban sprawl, the days of pollution levels so high that schools and government buildings have to close are essentially gone, proving that public policy can mitigate pollution significantly.

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