The Mercury

End of road looms for fuel-driven cars in Paris

- Brian Love

PARIS authoritie­s planned to banish all petrol- and dieselfuel­led cars from the world’s most visited city by 2030, said Paris City Hall.

The move marks an accelerati­on in plans to wean France off gas-guzzlers and switch to electric vehicles in a city often obliged to impose temporary bans due to surges in particle pollution in the air.

Paris City Hall said yesterday that France had already set a target date of 2040 for an end to cars dependent on fossil fuels and that this required speedier phase-outs in large cities.

“This is about planning for the long-term with a strategy that will reduce greenhouse gases,” said Christophe Najdovski, an official responsibl­e for transport policy at the office of mayor Anne Hidalgo.

Combustion

“Transport is one of the main greenhouse gas producers, so we are planning an exit from combustion engine vehicles, or fossil-energy vehicles, by 2030,” he told France Info radio.

The French capital, which will host the Olympic Games in the summer of 2024 and was host city for the latest worldwide pact on policies to tame global warming, had already been eyeing an end to diesel cars in the city by the time of the Olympics.

Paris City Hall, already under attack over the establishm­ent of no-car zones, carfree days and fines for drivers who enter the city in cars that are more than 20 years old, said it was not using the word “ban” but rather introducin­g a feasible deadline by which combustion-engine cars would be phased out.

There are about 32 million household cars in France, where the population is about 66 million, according to 2016 data from the Argus, a vehicle industry publicatio­n.

Many Parisians do not own cars, relying on extensive public transport systems and, increasing­ly, fast-burgeoning networks offering bikes, scooters and low-pollution hybrid engine cars for short-term rental.

The ban on petrol-fuelled vehicles marks a radical escalation of anti-pollution policy. – Reuters

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