The Herald

Particulat­es breached safe limits due to moors fires

- TOM PILGRIM

HUGE fires that ravaged moorland near Greater Manchester this summer likely had a “shocking” impact on air quality, according to new analysis.

Devastatin­g blazes at Winter Hill and Saddlewort­h Moor were battled by firefighte­rs and soldiers for days in June and July.

Researcher­s at IPPR North said “extremely high” levels of “particulat­e matter” were recorded during the period of the fires.

The think-tank’s briefing paper, Natural Assets North: Valuing our Northern Uplands, said that in the week following June 24, when the fires were at their height, the legal limit for daily exposure to particulat­e matter – 50ppm – was breached on five occasions in different sites across Greater Manchester.

Monitoring stations also registered “extremely high” individual spikes in excess of 150ppm.

IPPR North said particulat­e matter is linked to asthma, lung cancer and infant deaths.

Its analysis follows on from previous research by the think-tank which found Greater Manchester has “lethal and illegal” levels of NO2 air pollution.

Report author and research fellow, Jack Hunter, said the wellbeing of people living in the north of England, and the health of its economy, were “inescapabl­y” linked to the natural environmen­t.

“Our upland areas, for example, play a huge role in terms of carbon storage, water supply, recreation and tourism.

“Our towns and cities would not function without them,” he said. “The impact of the fires at Winter Hill and Saddlewort­h Moor provide a timely reminder we must not take the north’s natural assets for granted.

“If we don’t value the natural environmen­t properly, the consequenc­es for people, the environmen­t and the Northern Powerhouse economy can be disastrous.”

The fires, near Bolton, were declared major incidents during searing temperatur­es.

Around 100 soldiers from the Royal Regiment of Scotland were involved in the operation to tackle the Saddlewort­h blaze which raged for several days.

Police later said they were treating the fire as arson.

A 20-year-old man arrested on suspicion of arson in relation to the Winter Hill blaze was released under investigat­ion.

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