COVID-19: new call for London’s fleets to turn engines off when parked

Veolia employee and lorry

A new London-wide campaign, launched on 3rd August, encourages businesses to tackle air pollution caused by idling engines.

The call for action comes amidst emerging evidence that air pollution is linked to poor recovery and higher infection rates of COVID-19 due to damage caused to the lungs.

Idling Action’s #enginesoff campaign asks firms to pledge that their fleet drivers and other employees will not leave their engines on when parked.

The Idling Action Project, jointly led by the City of London Corporation and the London Borough of Camden, and supported by the Mayor of London, has been running since 2016. It sees 30 London local authorities and the City of London Corporation joining forces in a bid to cut dangerous vehicle emissions.

As part of the #EnginesOff pledge, Idling Action is offering London drivers free training and is providing a toolkit of resources to businesses, whose operations involve vehicle fleets, professional drivers, or employees who travel by car to work.

The group wants to arm companies with the knowledge of how best to reduce air pollution caused by vehicles to protect the health of drivers and the public.

Veolia’s Central London contracts with City of London Corporation, Camden and Westminster have been among the first to pledge their support for the campaign, continuing to demonstrate the company’s commitment to reducing vehicle emissions and helping to improve air quality. Veolia, the UK’s leading resource management company, has also been at the forefront of the recycling and waste industry’s move to electric vehicles. 

Idling Action officers have already run air pollution anti-idling workshops with 40 schools, and spoken with nearly 8,000 drivers to ask them to switch off their engines at regular idling action events with London’s local authorities.

As well as asking businesses to pledge, the partner local authorities own fleets will be taking part in driver training and taking the #EnginesOff pledge.

To find out more about the #EnginesOff Campaign and sign the pledge, as well as learning more about how the London boroughs are tackling air pollution, visit the website below. To get involved email [email protected]

  64,000 people die prematurely every year in the UK from breathing polluted air. Switching off the engine when your vehicle is parked is more important now than ever before. As we learn more about the harmful effects of COVID-19 on the lungs, we are making a particular plea to London’s businesses to play their part in ridding the capital of toxic air and saving lives.  
Keith Bottomley, Chairman of the City of London Corporation’s Environmental Services Committee


 

Preventing engine idling is already high on our agenda and joining the Vehicle Idling Action campaign demonstrates our ongoing commitment to creating a greener and more sustainable city. 
Veolia is investing in zero-emission electric vehicles, as well as trialling alternative fleet solutions, to support the improvement of air quality and avoid pollution. We continue to work closely with our teams to ensure that engines are only running when necessary and are switched off when not in use. 
Michael Clarke, General Manager for Veolia Central London


 

A clean work environment and work processes makes for a safer and healthier workplace. Given that poor air quality is one of the biggest killers in the UK; reducing harmful emissions on site can help reduce the risk of respiratory problems for people who work on site and the communities we work in.
Mace will work with the Idling Action Project to deliver anti-idling training to our colleagues and those who work for our supply chain, equipping them with the knowledge needed to reduce unnecessary air pollution. Asking drivers not to idle is a simple action which can help to protect the health of those working on site and the local community.
Omar Rouchdy, Mace’s Senior Sustainability Manager
Construction company MACE have already signed up to the initiative.


 

City Hall is happy to support this important pan-London campaign to tackle engine idling.
Through the Mayor’s Air Quality Fund, we have helped businesses to cut air pollution through Business Low Emission Neighbourhoods and other local schemes, reducing pollution, supporting cleaner vehicles and greener forms of transport. Encouraging businesses to take the #EnginesOff pledge will build on this.
As London recovers from COVID-19, it’s vital that businesses and other drivers in the capital consider the health of others and take this simple but vital step towards cutting air pollution.
Shirley Rodrigues, Deputy Mayor for Environment and Energy


 

-Related Articles-

Improving Indoor Air Quality in your building

The United Nations reported that air quality in 44 UK towns and cities was too dangerous to breathe, so shouldn't you be considering improving the Indoor Air Quality in your building?

Over 70% of Brits oblivious to indoor air’s deadly impact

Veolia calls for stricter guidelines to avoid 20,000 related deaths every year - but there is a tech solution!

Revolutionary technology to help clean up air quality for Londoners

Ground-breaking technology developed in the UK will be fitted to rubbish trucks in Westminster, in the bid to reduce harmful emissions and nitrogen oxide by 99 per cent.