Stockholm to ban petrol, diesel cars from city centre in clean-air drive
Ruling city council coalition hopes to get more people to move to electric cars from combustion-engine vehicles
10 October 2023 - 17:24
byMarta Frackowiak
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Stockholm will ban petrol and diesel-powered cars from key parts of the city centre from 2025 as it seeks to improve air quality and reduce traffic noise, the Swedish capital’s vice mayor for transport said on Tuesday.
The plan introduces an environmental zone across 20 blocks of Stockholm’s inner city, covering high-end shopping streets and some of Sweden’s most expensive office real estate.
The Green Party, part of the Stockholm City Council’s ruling coalition of left-wing and environmentally-focused parties, hopes this will boost the speed at which people exchange combustion-engine cars for electric ones.
“Nowadays, the air in Stockholm causes babies to have lung conditions and the elderly to die prematurely. It is a completely unacceptable situation,” Green Party vice mayor for transport Lars Stromgren said in a statement.
What is called a class-three environmental zone primarily allows fully electric cars. Exceptions apply for bigger vans, where plug-in hybrid vehicles will be allowed under the regulation.
Some vehicles are exempted from the regulation, including ambulances and police vehicles as well as cars where the driver or a passenger has a documented disability.
The plan is to further expand the environmental zone after the initial introduction, the Green Party said.
Companies in the transport sector said the plan went too far and that the city should instead focus on investing more in electric charging points to bring about voluntary change.
“Since 2010, we have reduced emissions by 34%. But the Green Party and their colleagues in the city of Stockholm are now in far too much of a hurry,” the Swedish Confederation of Transport Enterprises said in a statement.
Stockholm will be the first city in Sweden to introduce the class-three environmental zone.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Stockholm to ban petrol, diesel cars from city centre in clean-air drive
Ruling city council coalition hopes to get more people to move to electric cars from combustion-engine vehicles
Stockholm will ban petrol and diesel-powered cars from key parts of the city centre from 2025 as it seeks to improve air quality and reduce traffic noise, the Swedish capital’s vice mayor for transport said on Tuesday.
The plan introduces an environmental zone across 20 blocks of Stockholm’s inner city, covering high-end shopping streets and some of Sweden’s most expensive office real estate.
The Green Party, part of the Stockholm City Council’s ruling coalition of left-wing and environmentally-focused parties, hopes this will boost the speed at which people exchange combustion-engine cars for electric ones.
“Nowadays, the air in Stockholm causes babies to have lung conditions and the elderly to die prematurely. It is a completely unacceptable situation,” Green Party vice mayor for transport Lars Stromgren said in a statement.
What is called a class-three environmental zone primarily allows fully electric cars. Exceptions apply for bigger vans, where plug-in hybrid vehicles will be allowed under the regulation.
Some vehicles are exempted from the regulation, including ambulances and police vehicles as well as cars where the driver or a passenger has a documented disability.
The plan is to further expand the environmental zone after the initial introduction, the Green Party said.
Companies in the transport sector said the plan went too far and that the city should instead focus on investing more in electric charging points to bring about voluntary change.
“Since 2010, we have reduced emissions by 34%. But the Green Party and their colleagues in the city of Stockholm are now in far too much of a hurry,” the Swedish Confederation of Transport Enterprises said in a statement.
Stockholm will be the first city in Sweden to introduce the class-three environmental zone.
Reuters
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