Issue - meetings

South Tees Clean Air Strategy

Meeting: 24/07/2024 - Executive (Item 11)

11 South Tees Clean Air Strategy pdf icon PDF 328 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Mayor and Executive Member for Adult Social Care and Public Health submitted a report for Executive consideration.

 

The purpose of the report was to seek Executive approval of the South Tees Clean Air Strategy.

 

The Mayor presented the report advising Executive that exposure to air pollution could affect everyone's health. When people inhaled air pollutants, those pollutants could enter bloodstreams and contribute to coughing or cause eye irritation. They could also cause, or worsen, many breathing and lung diseases, leading to hospitalisations, cancer, or even premature death. The effects of air pollution could be severe in people that already had underlying medical conditions. It was important that air quality was monitored in our area to ensure that pollutant levels were not exceeding levels that could cause illness to our residents.

 

In Middlesbrough there were two air quality monitoring sites located at Breckon Hill Primary School and MacMillan College. Each site monitored air quality using real time monitoring equipment. The pollutants measured were particulate matter (PM10 and PM 2.5), nitrogen dioxides, sulphur dioxides and ozone. There were also 24 tubes located across Middlesbrough which monitored nitrogen dioxide. These tubes were changed monthly and gave an annual average result for the area. This provided an indication of nitrogen dioxide levels across the whole of the town. All the pollutants measured in Middlesbrough had the ability to impact on the health of its communities and therefore air quality monitoring was vital to ensure that Middlesbrough did not reach levels of air quality that could cause ill effects.

 

The South Tees Clean Air Strategy demonstrated that air quality across Middlesbrough was good and met the UK legal standards. The graphs in Appendix two of the report showed the air quality levels for PM10 and nitrogen dioxide and how they had compared with both the national and the WHO standards over the period 2011-2022. Although air quality levels met the UK legal standards, these could change and become more stringent in the future. The World Health Organisation had their own air quality guidelines (AQG) as a global target for national, regional and city governments to work towards improving air pollution. Most local authorities within England and Wales did not meet these AQG guidelines. However, they set an aspirational target, a reminder that there was still room for improvement that should be worked towards. Therefore, through the Clean Air Strategy Middlesbrough aimed to improve its air quality in the South Tees beyond UK legal standards, to protect the health of our residents and to make our air as clean as it can be.

 

The Mayor commented that air quality in the town would continue to be monitored and was heading in the right direction. It was clarified that the monitoring sites in Middlesbrough were monitored monthly as standard but could be more often if required.

 

Members queried if the Clean Air Strategy accounted for future housing developments and the loss of trees as these contributed to air pollution.

 

While other sectors, such as industry and  ...  view the full minutes text for item 11