AA: Rephase lights to cut car emissions
Last updated 13:35, Saturday, 19 April 2008
REPHASING traffic light sequences to cut car queues would reduce carbon dioxide emissions more effectively than switching off streetlights, according to research from the AA.
Buckinghamshire County Council reckons it can save 590 tonnes of CO2 by switching off 2,000 streetlights.
But the AA said cutting queues by just one minute a day on three major roads leading into any city would save more than 645 tonnes of CO2.
The queues could be reduced by rephasing traffic lights and doing away with unco-ordinated roadworks and certain traffic calming measures.
This would lead to cars not idling for so long and not pumping out so much CO2.
AA president Edmund King said: “Our latest research reveals the massive CO2 benefits of keeping the traffic moving. The Highway Agency’s traffic officers are helping to reduce the environmental impact of queuing traffic but more could be done by other highway authorities.
“Stationary traffic or idling longer at the lights is not good for the environment, so we need a concerted effort to reduce congestion.”
The AA reckons that 1,000 cars held up for 10 seconds every working day while heading to and from work produce enough extra carbon dioxide to fill three and a half squash courts.
Have your say
- New chapter opens in city’s education
- Carlisle restaurant says boy, eight, is too tall for children's meal
- Teenagers stranded by coach company
- Leave us smokers alone, trim your expenses and fix the holes in the road
- CCTV and loudpeakers plan to beat Carlisle yobs
- Outcry after Solway lifeboat taken away
- Emmerdale star Roxanne fronts domestic violence campaign
- 500 against Carlisle wind turbine plan
- Shops selling deadly knives to teenagers
- Cumberland sausage set to be protected
- Carlisle's debt-ridden Liberal Club facing closure
- Cardboard box funerals introduced
- City homes hit by flood insurance shock
- Status Quo rock Whitehaven