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Wednesday 27 February 2019 11:24 am  |  Updated:  Monday 03 June 2019 1:44 am

500 London roads breach air pollution limits as Mayor warns of air quality crisis

Almost 500 London roads and landmark locations breach air pollution limits, campaigners warned today.

Read more: Westminster pledges £28m to ease traffic jams on the Strand

The news comes after the Mayor of London issued a high pollution alert for the capital yesterday in response to the unseasonably warm weather.

The worst offender listed in the report was Earls Court station, where nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels exceeded the government's limit by more than three times. 

Kensington High Street, Euston Road and the Strand were among some of London’s other famous sites in the top 10 for air pollution.

Earls Court had 129.5ug/m3 of NO2 in the air despite targets set for 2005 that levels should not exceed 40ug/m3.

High levels of NO2 are linked to asthma and other breathing difficulties.

“It’s unforgivable to see so many locations across London over air quality limits, leaving millions of us breathing dangerously polluted air,” said Catriona Currie, a campaigner from Friends of the Earth, the organisation behind today's report.

Here are London's 10 worst areas for air pollution:

London location Annual average level of NO2 (ug/m3)
Earls Court Station 129.5
Junction North Circular Road, Brent 115.39
Ikea, North Circular Road, Brent 102.1
Kensington High Street, Kensington & Chelsea 94.5
Euston Road, Camden 92.45
The Strand, City of Westminster 92
Harlesden High Street, Brent 91.83
Haddon Hall Tower Bridge Road, Southwark 90.79
Peckham High Street, Southwark 87.51
Dollis Hill Lane, Cricklewood, Brent 85.97

A spokesperson for mayor of London Sadiq Khan said yesterday: “The high levels of pollution expected over the next few days is evidence of the scale of London’s air quality crisis and is exactly why the mayor is taking hard-hitting measures to clean it up.”

Currie praised Khan for “making some good progress with the Ultra Low Emission Zone (Ulez)”, calling the mayor’s policy a “sign of hope for air quality in the city”.

However, Currie called on the mayor to go further to tackle air pollution, adding “We need the Ulez to cover the entirety of greater London so that all Londoners can breathe cleaner air.”

Read more: One hour of Tube pollution is as bad as 24 hours next to a busy road

The Ulez will be in place from 8 April and will apply to the same area as the congestion charge zone.

Plans are in the works for it to be expanded to the north and south circular roads by 2021.

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