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4/9/14, "Reducing car pollution easier than UN experts thought," BBC, Roger Harrabin
"Reducing pollution from cars has been cheaper and easier than UN experts thought, a draft report says.
But the panel says all the improvements will be swamped by the future growth in global traffic.
That is unless governments improve public transport,
tax motorists and
plan cities for walking and cycling.
The report, seen by BBC News, warns that transport will become the biggest source of CO2 emissions
unless politicians act firmly....
The report lists a host of measures to be used
to combat increased emissions. Some will be controversial, others will
be invisible.
The UK's leading expert on transport and the environment, Prof Julia King from Aston University, told BBC News: "The automotive industry has brought energy efficiency technologies into vehicles faster than most people predicted and at lower cost.
"The result in the UK of technology acceleration, combined with fuel price increases and the impact of the recession, is that new car emissions fell to 130g/km - two years ahead of the EU deadline of 2015. The drop shows that regulation can work - the EU new car CO2 regulatory target
and the US efficiency target
seem to be driving the acceleration.""...
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