The annual average European legal limit for nitrogen
dioxide, which is linked to asthma and other respiratory problems, is set at 40
microgrammes per cubic metre. But new research from Friends of the Earth
Scotland, collected from official monitoring stations, says it was breached on
streets across the country in 2015.
It listed annual average levels as:
St. John's Road
Edinburgh: 65 microgrammes
Hope Street Glasgow: 60
microgrammes
Seagate, Dundee: 50
microgrammes
Atholl Street, Perth:
48 microgrammes
Lochee Road, Dundee:
48 microgrammes
Union Street,
Aberdeen: 46 microgrammes
Queensferry Road,
Edinburgh: 41 microgrammes
Wellington Road,
Aberdeen: 41 microgrammes
Friends of the Earth Scotland also collected data on
particulate matter - tiny particles which are pumped into the air by diesel
vehicles. It said streets in Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Perth, Glasgow, Dundee,
Falkirk and Rutherglen failed to meet Scottish air quality standards.
Friends of the Earth Scotland air pollution campaigner
Emilia Hanna, said: "Air pollution causes 2,000 early deaths in Scotland
every year - it's a serious public health crisis and tackling it should be a
top priority for the Scottish government."
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