European
commission spokesman says PM's remarks that conditions are due to Saharan dust
are 'more than disappointing'
Rowena
Mason and Josh Halliday
The
Guardian, Thursday 3 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/apr/03/cameron-uk-smog-pollution-europe
David
Cameron has come under withering attack from the European Commission, accused
of failing to get to grips with the levels of air pollution in Britain
after he labelled the smog afflicting parts of the country a "naturally
occurring weather phenomenon".
As
ambulance services in London
reported a 14% spike in 999 calls due to breathing problems and forecasters
predicted the poor conditions would subside by the weekend, Cameron urged
people to take heed of warnings from the Met Office and public health
officials. "It is unpleasant, and you can feel it in the air … I didn't go
for my morning run. I chose to do some work instead. You can feel it.
"But
it's a naturally occurring weather phenomenon. It sounds extraordinary, Saharan
dust, but that is what it is."
His
comments, to the BBC, were attacked by the opposition and questioned by experts
who said that underlying air pollution from industry and cars posed the more
significant danger to public health. But the most stinging criticism came from
the European Commission whose environment spokesman, Joe Hennon, described the
prime minister's comments as "more than disappointing" and of showing
a "clear misunderstanding" of the air pollution crisis facing the UK.
"It's
more than disappointing because you have 400,000 people across the EU dying
each year – including 29,000
in the UK – because of air pollution," Hennon said.
"To say this is a temporary issue caused by Saharan dust shows a clear
misunderstanding of the air pollution issue. Next week you will still have the
same levels of air pollution in London
and unless governments do something about that we will still have these
problems."
In
February, the European commission began legal action against the UK for failing
to reduce levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) air pollution despite 15 years of
warnings. The EU environment commissioner, Janez Potocnik, has singled out Britain for its
"persistent" breaches of the air quality directive. Hennan, the
European commission spokesman for Potocnik, said: "It's clearly an issue
you would expect any government to deal with if it's serious about protecting
the health of the general public.
"It
shows that the problem is not yet understood and one of the reasons we're
taking legal action against the UK
is that they've not met the targets they agreed to. If I was living in the UK then I would
not be happy about that."
The London mayor also played
down the issue, telling ITV News that people needed to have some balance:
"I cycled this morning and it seemed perfectly fine to me. I think we need
to keep a little bit of a sense of proportion. I cycled perfectly happily
around today." His remarks prompted derision from Brussels . Hennan said: "It suggests to
me their advisers maybe haven't done enough research. It's very clear the UK has a serious problem – not just the UK but half the
EU countries – and it's a fairly glaringly obvious one, and all you have to do
is read some analysis of the issue."
The
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has said the problem
has been caused by a combination of local emissions, light winds, pollution
from the continent and dust blown over from Africa .
The
comments from Cameron and Johnson infuriated MPs who have long been warning
about air quality, and drew criticism from Labour, which accused the government
of failing to get a grip on a serious public health problem.
Maria
Eagle, the shadow environment secretary, said: "David Cameron is wrong to
say our air quality crisis is due to just wind movement across continents.
"The
real issue is that the government has no plan to address air pollution and has
tried to hide the problem. They recently had to scrap their own air quality
strategy because of evidence that it would have made the problem worse and they
now have no plan at all.
"This
is not just an environmental problem. It is a serious health problem because
poor air quality causes 29,000 early deaths each year in the UK , at an
average loss of life of 11.5 years."
Caroline
Lucas, the Green party MP for Brighton Pavilion, said Cameron and Johnson were
showing "appalling complacency". She urged the government to consider
options such as asking people to use their cars less, rather than asking the
sick and vulnerable to stay indoors. "There absolutely need to be more
proactive measures taken by the government on this major public health
issue," she said.People suffering breathing difficulties made thousands
more calls to 999 than usual on Wednesday and Thursday in the smog-hit east of
England and up into the west Midlands, while in London the ambulance service
reported a 14% spike in calls for patients with respiratory problems.
A powerful
band of Saharan dust loomed over east Anglia on Thursday night as
showers were expected to bring some of the sand down and leave a rust-coloured
layer across millions of cars and properties.
But experts
said the eye of the dust cloud would be pushed away from Britain by strong Atlantic winds on Friday and
Saturday, moving it towards Belgium ,
the Netherlands and
north-west Germany .
"On
Friday most parts of the UK
will be in the low bracket for pollution so it's not anything we should be
ridiculously worried about," said Laura Young of the Met Office. "By
Saturday and the end of the weekend the whole country will be back to
normal."
Forecasters
at Defra said south-east Scotland ,
north-east England , north Wales and east Anglia would experience
moderate levels of pollution – but far reduced from the record levels reached
on Thursday.
Dr Matthew
Loxham, of the University
of Southampton , said:
"While the combination of meteorological conditions and air pollution
levels have brought about the current situation, we are more concerned about
the general levels of air pollution that do not make the headlines.
"[General
levels of air pollution] may affect the lung development of children and have
as-yet uncharacterised effects on the health of those exposed to it. There is
an even greater link between air pollution and effects on the cardiovascular
system (eg heart disease and stroke)."
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