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Economic Development

Call to tackle Birmingham's pollution problems

Data gathered from testing sites shows that the worst reading recorded at Birmingham’s Tyburn Road was 111 micrograms of nitrogen dioxide in each cubic metre

Birmingham city centre as seen from the roof of Fort Dunlop

Green campaigners have called for urgent action to tackle air pollution as it emerged that some parts of Birmingham are engulfed by high levels of ‘lethal’ particles.

Data gathered from testing sites shows that the worst reading recorded at Birmingham’s Tyburn Road was 111 micrograms of nitrogen dioxide in each cubic metre of air on March 13 this year.

European Union rules say that, over the course of a year, there should be an average of no more than 40 micrograms per cubic metre. The recording station in Tyburn Road has an average of 46 so far this year.

The results were revealed at the Commons Environmental Audit Committee which named the West Midlands as one of a number of areas which is failing to meet EU targets for levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in the atmosphere.

In the wake of the figures, MPs warned that schools, hospitals and care homes should be built away from major roads to prevent hundreds of deaths every year. And schools which are already near traffic hotspots should be fitted with air filtration systems, to ensure children are breathing clean air.

Earlier this year the Department for the Environment revealed it expects air pollution in the region to exceed official limits set by the European Union until 2025.

And separate figures from Public Health England show that air pollution is estimated to cause 1,500 excess deaths a year in the West Midlands. This includes 520 deaths in Birmingham, 168 in Coventry, 173 in Dudley, 198 in Sandwell, 107 in Solihull, 155 in Walsall and 139 in Wolverhampton.

The culprit is nitrogen dioxide, a gas released when fuels are burned, including petrol or diesel in a car engine.