Rutherglen Reformer

COP26 travel advice

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Lanarkshir­e commuters are being urged to plan ahead for journeys to and from Glasgow as the city prepares to host global climate change conference COP26, with “severe transport congestion”expected.

With tens of thousands of Lanarkshir­e residents ordinarily travelling into the city each day, officials are warning about the “unpreceden­ted impact”of the event on the region’s transport networks, and add that“planned and unplanned protests are also inevitable”.

Stretches of the M8, M74 and M80 motorways are expected to be significan­tly busier than normal during the event from October 31 to November 12; and the overall transport impact will begin from this Saturday when the Clydeside Expressway, beside the conference site, closes for nearly a month.

Figures from the most recent national census, in 2011, showed that Lanarkshir­e had the highest amount of daily inflows to Glasgow of any of its surroundin­g local authority areas.

Those statistics indicate that an estimated 31,591 journeys were made each day from South Lanarkshir­e, and 28,034 from North Lanarkshir­e.

Up to 140 world leaders and 25,000 conference delegates are expected at the climate change event – including the

Queen, US president Joe Biden and leading politician­s, environmen­talists and scientists from all over the world.

Transport Scotland head of events resilience Nicola Blaney said:“The scale of COP26 is unpreceden­ted in terms of the impact it will have on our transport networks. We know that Halloween weekend, Monday and Tuesday, November 1 and 2, and Saturday November 6 will all be particular­ly busy and commuters should expect severe delays. This is due to a combinatio­n of road closures around the SEC including the Clydeside Expressway, and the additional demand on the network from those attending the conference.

“We’d urge everyone to stay informed and plan ahead to make the right journeys at the right times so we can keep Glasgow and the central belt moving as the region takes to the world stage for this once-in-alifetime event.”

Commuters and anyone travelling to the city are encouraged to use the Get Ready Glasgow website for constantly-updates informatio­n on impacted roads, alternativ­e routes and congestion.

Transport minister Graeme Dey said: “The most up-to-date informatio­n including a detailed travel plan, maps and road closures is readily available.”

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