The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mexico eyes stricter car emissions amid smog alert

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MEXICO CITY: Mexico’s president demanded yesterday stricter vehicle emissions controls for the country’s sprawling capital as an air pollution alert prompted authoritie­s to restrict traffic for a third straight day.

Some 1.1 million vehicles were banned from the metropolis, children and the elderly were encouraged to stay indoors, and bus and subway services were offered for free amid the first high ozone alert in 14 years.

President Enrique Pena Nieto, meanwhile, instructed the environmen­t ministry to establish ‘as soon as possible’ a new vehicle emissions test system with the best available technology to ‘ensure low emissions of pollutants’ from cars.

“But we can’t leave it at that. We need to go further, be more audacious and more determined” to prevent air pollution, he said in a speech at the inaugurati­on of a military health center.

Pena Nieto said the environmen­t minister will have to coordinate with authoritie­s in the capital and five surroundin­g states to create the new rules for a metropolit­an area of 21 million people, with five million vehicles out on the road each day.

The pollution alert marks a reversal from years of progress to improve air quality after the United Nations declared the Mexican capital the world’s most polluted city in the 1990s.

The air quality alert was issued after ozone concentrat­ion surpassed the 190-point limit, surging to 194, which can cause respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular ailments.

City authoritie­s say a court ruling last year watered down a program that limits the number of days that older cars can be on the road, causing one million more vehicles to swarm the streets. — AFP

 ??  ?? Buildings stand shrouded in smog in Mexico City. Mexico City’s government ordered traffic restrictio­ns and recommende­d people stay indoors due to serious air pollution, issuing its second-highest alert warning for ozone levels for the first time in 13 years. — Reuters photo
Buildings stand shrouded in smog in Mexico City. Mexico City’s government ordered traffic restrictio­ns and recommende­d people stay indoors due to serious air pollution, issuing its second-highest alert warning for ozone levels for the first time in 13 years. — Reuters photo

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