Paris, Madrid, Athens and Mexico City Pledge To Ban Diesel Cars By 2025

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Diesel cars and trucks will be banned in Paris, Madrid, Athens and Mexico City by 2025 as part of a groundbreaking initiative to curb pollution.

At a climate meeting in Mexico, the cities’ mayors also pledged to incentivise electric, hybrid and hydrogen vehicles, and walking and cycling.

The move comes amid increasing concerns about the impact of diesel engines on the health of people living in cities.

Last week a report found that air pollution causes nearly half a million premature deaths each year in Europe alone.

Philippe Wojazer / Reuters

Diesel engines release particulate matter, which can contribute to cardiovascular illness, and nitrogen oxides, which exacerbate breathing difficulties.

Paris has already banned vehicles registered before 1997 from the city, while some parts of the city have undergone extensive pedestrianisation.

Anne Hidalgo, Paris’s mayor, told the BBC: “Our city is implementing a bold plan - we will progressively ban the most polluting vehicles from the roads, helping Paris citizens with concrete accompanying measures.”

“Our ambition is clear and we have started to roll it out: we want to ban diesel from our city, following the model of Tokyo, which has already done the same.”

Mexico City’s mayor said people were “grappling” with the both air pollution and traffic.

“By expanding alternative transportation options like our Bus Rapid Transport and subway systems, while also investing in cycling infrastructure, we are working to ease congestion in our roadways and our lungs,” Miguel Angel Mancera told the BBC.

Mexico City is seen through heavy smog in the early morning March 30, 2011.
Mexico City is seen through heavy smog in the early morning March 30, 2011.
STRINGER Mexico / Reuters

Madrid’s mayor Manuela Carmena said the measures would have the knock-on benefit of reducing emissions that cause global warming.

They will also have a knock-on effect on the auto industry, whose execs will be bracing themselves for more cities to ban diesel vehicles.

In October, German lawmakers voted to ban combustion-engine cars by 2030 in an attempt to meet emissions targets outlined in the Paris agreement.

The EU will need to adopt the resolution for it to come into effect in 14 years, but Germany regulation often shapes European law.

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