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Windsor & Maidenhead air quality petition triggers full council meeting

The efforts of one person to unite a community offers an example of local democracy in action, and shows increased support for improved air pollution monitoring. 

An air quality petition aimed at the Royal Borough of Windsor & Maidenhead (RBWM) has closed with well over 2,000 signatures – enough to trigger a full council meeting. 

silhouette of mountain under cloudy sky during sunset

The campaign was started by resident Thomas Wigley, who is calling for better monitoring of particulate matter, often considered to be the most dangerous form of air pollution in terms of human health. 

‘This petition asks RBWM to increase particulates measurements in its five Air Quality Management Areas.  I hope that we can now have constructive discussions with RBWM and get proper particulates monitoring. The petition is timely because the respected Francis Crick Institute has recently published breakthrough research results proving a link between PM2.5 particulates and lung cancer, and the UK’s Office for Environmental Protection recently wrote to DEFRA urging it to bring forward its PM2.5 target date,’ said Wigley. 

‘It’s crazy to believe that a single particulates monitoring site in Maidenhead is enough for a Borough which covers 197 square kilometres and has its own local pollution hotspots. Deadly PM2.5 particles aren’t measured at all and that really concerns me. I would be particularly concerned if, for example, I lived in Holyport, which straddles the M4.  This already busy motorway now has a one third increase in traffic capacity since it was upgraded to be a ‘Smart’ motorway,’ he continued. 

Last month, the world’s worst cities for hazardous nitrogen dioxide pollution were revealed, with experts criticising global efforts at monitoring, labelling current infrastructure as inadequate. 

Image: Tim Umphreys

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