The Scotsman

Scottish ministers under fire over lack of effort on toxic air

● Campaigner­s say nothing new is on the table for UK Air Quality Plan

- By ILONA AMOS

Environmen­talists have hit out at Scottish ministers for inaction on tackling dangerous levels of air pollution.

They says the Scottish Government’s contributi­on to the new draft Air Quality Plan for the UK is “lacking in urgency and uninspired”.

The new plan was ordered by the High Court after a previous incarnatio­n was ruled unlawful for aiming too low.

But activists from Friends of the Earth Scotland say the Scottish Government has put nothing new on the table exceptacom­mitmenttos­etup one low-emission zone.

“Our towns and cities continue to be plagued with invisible killer air pollution, but the Scottish Government’s input into a new plan for action has been lacking in urgency and uninspired,” said air pollution campaigner Emilia Hanna.

“The High Court demanded fresh plans showing how air pollution would be reduced as quickly as possible, and required that every technicall­y feasible measure be included. As part of those plans, the Scottish Government’s key commitment is to consult on a Low Emissions Framework later this year. But it was sup-

0 Air pollution causes 2,500 early deaths in Scotland annually posed to have completed that Framework back in 2016.

“The input from the Scottish Government falls well short of tackling our air pollution crisis, and all the while people continue to die early and suffer ill health.”

She welcomed a promise to deliver the country’s first lowemissio­n zone by 2018 but much wider measures are required to deal with illegal levels of pollution in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Dundee and Perth.

She added: “The Scottish Government is ignoring the fact that Scottish cities are in breach of European legal obligation­s, which are there to keep the public safe from toxic air pollution.

“People in Scotland need to know when and how we will have the clean air to which we are entitled.”

Air pollution is linked to a rise in heart attacks, strokes and lung conditions, including asthma, as well as affecting the developmen­t of unborn babies.

Official figures suggest breathing contaminat­ed air leads to 2,500 premature deaths every year in Scotland, part of 40,000 across the UK and seven million globally.

It is the leading environmen­tal health risk around the world, with experts claiming it represents a “public health crisis”.

There are a total of 38 declared pollution zones across Scotland.

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