Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee

Twenty-Second Report - Tackling local air quality breaches

Public Accounts Committee HC 37 Published 26 October 2022
Report Status
Government responded
Conclusions & Recommendations
33 items (6 recs)
Government Response
AI assessment · 22 of 33 classified
Accepted 7
Accepted in Part 1
Acknowledged 9
Rejected 5
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Recommendations

4 results
2 Accepted

There is a high level of uncertainty in government’s model for assessing pollution levels, which...

Recommendation
There is a high level of uncertainty in government’s model for assessing pollution levels, which may mean that further areas of poor air quality might be missed by the programme. Government uses a national model to identify areas that are … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government states that the best available evidence has been used to identify areas exceeding pollution limits and that the national model meets uncertainty requirements. They will continue to improve the model and have increased the number of monitoring locations. They will consider local authority monitoring data if it meets AQSR requirements.
HM Treasury
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5 Accepted

Government is not yet taking a sufficiently integrated approach to tackling the problem of poor...

Recommendation
Government is not yet taking a sufficiently integrated approach to tackling the problem of poor air quality. Measures to tackle air pollution on the strategic road network risk displacing heavy vehicle traffic onto local roads. Although government is aware of … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the recommendation and states they have consulted on a revised National Air Pollution Control Programme (NAPCP) which includes robust actionable measures for further consideration to deliver compliance with the 2030 targets for all air pollutants.
HM Treasury
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6 Accepted

There is a lot resting on the updated plan that government expects to publish if...

Recommendation
There is a lot resting on the updated plan that government expects to publish if 2030 air quality targets are to be met. The UK may have missed its target for national ammonia emissions in 2020, and existing policy measures … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the recommendation and states they have consulted on a revised National Air Pollution Control Programme (NAPCP) that includes robust actionable measures to deliver compliance with the 2030 targets for all air pollutants.
HM Treasury
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14 Accepted

The UK Air website is government’s main source of communication on air quality, but it...

Recommendation
The UK Air website is government’s main source of communication on air quality, but it is fairly impenetrable to the general public.11 While the website provides a high- level air pollution forecast, and allows users to download air quality datasets, … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to improve communication of air quality information to the public through a comprehensive Air Quality Information System (AQIS) Review, with outcomes published on UK-AIR and a final report in early 2024, and a major overhaul of the UK-Air website by March 2025.
HM Treasury
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Conclusions (3)

Observations and findings
16 Conclusion Accepted
National Highways acknowledge that the accessibility of the government’s data on air quality is an issue, and Defra told us that it is reviewing its social media and online offering over the next 18 months. It particularly highlighted the need to test the quality of its messaging for specific groups, …
Government Response Summary
The government recognizes the need to effectively communicate air quality information to the public and launched a comprehensive Air Quality Information System (AQIS) Review to ensure members of the public have what they need; outcomes will be published on UK-AIR with a final report in early 2024, and the government aims to complete the web system review by March 2025.
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22 Conclusion Accepted
We asked if departments had considered revisiting the assumption of a clean air zone as the baseline for judging local authority plans, given that there have been delays to implementation. DfT told us that the evidence from the latest annual assessment is that the clean air zone is the fastest …
Government Response Summary
Local authorities are responsible for developing their own Clean Air Plans, with government support; they can use measures other than Clean Air Zones if compliance can be achieved as quickly.
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30 Conclusion Accepted
In addition to working with local authorities, the Department for Transport and the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs needs to ensure it is working with other sectors with either an interest in, or an influence on, air quality, such as the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees and has consulted on a revised National Air Pollution Control Programme (NAPCP) with actionable measures to deliver compliance with the 2030 targets and ensure full integration between different areas of responsibility.
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