Yorkshire Post

Tackling pollution ‘must be Gove’s top priority’

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NEWLY APPOINTED Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove has been urged to make improving Britain’s air quality his “top priority” following the Government’s repeated failures to tackle the country’s soaring air pollution rates.

High levels of potentiall­y toxic emissions in UK cities have become a major health concern in recent years, with substances like nitrogen dioxide and particulat­es from car exhausts believed to contribute to 40,000 early deaths.

Previous government­s have failed to produce effective plans to cut pollution and have been taken to court twice since 2015 by environmen­tal campaign group ClientEart­h.

However, ministers published a new draft air quality strategy just before the election, and the independen­t thinktank the IPPR is asking Mr Gove to use his new role “to set a bold new direction”.

“The last Environmen­t Secretary was dragged kicking and screaming by the courts into publishing better air quality plans,” said IPPR research fellow Harry Quilter-Pinner.

“The truth is that even the draft plans now published fall a long way short of a comprehens­ive strategy to tackle Britain’s filthy air.

“Air quality is one of the most pressing problems now sitting in Michael Gove’s in-tray.

“He should take the opportunit­y to set a bold new direction for the decades to come by adopting this bold air quality strategy.”

Mr Gove’s record on the environmen­t has been called into question since his appointmen­t, having repeatedly opposed measures designed to curb carbon dioxide and other emissions.

But his return to Government has been met with relish by landowners, who have praised the Leave campaigner’s “reputation for robust challenge of the status quo and a reformer’s zeal”. The Country Land and Business Associatio­n said Defra “has a major role to play” in Brexit negotiatio­ns and it “looks forward” to working with Mr Gove and his team.

 ??  ?? MPs gather in the House of Commons the first sitting since the election which resulted in a hung Parliament.
MPs gather in the House of Commons the first sitting since the election which resulted in a hung Parliament.

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