40 million to drive green car revolution across UK cities
£40 million to drive green car revolution across UK cities
Nottingham, Bristol, Milton Keynes and London named as winners of multi-million fund to encourage drivers to go green.
Four cities have been awarded significant funds today (25 January 2016) to promote green vehicle technology after successfully bidding for a share of a multi-million pot created to support the take-up of plug-in electrical cars across the UK .
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin announced the winners of the Go Ultra Low City Scheme, after the successful cities proposed a number of initiatives to support greener vehicles as part of a government competition.
The winning cities will produce a rollout of cutting edge technology, such as rapid-charging hubs and street lighting that dual as charge points, along with a range of innovative proposals that will give plug-in car owners extra local privileges such as access to bus lanes in city centres. Around 25,000 parking spaces will also be opened up for plug-in car owners saving commuters as much as £1,300 a year.
The funding has been awarded to cities which have designed schemes that will help encourage thousands of people to consider switching to a plug-in car. These proposals will support the UK ’s thriving green vehicle sector, improve air quality in urban hotspots and help the government meet its emission cutting targets.
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin said:
These Go Ultra Low Cities have proposed titillating, innovative ideas that will encourage drivers to choose an electrical car. I want to see thousands more greener vehicles on our roads and I am proud to back this ambition with £40 million to help the UK become international pioneers of emission cutting technology.
The UK is a world leader in the uptake of low emission vehicles and our long-term economic plan is investing £600 million by two thousand twenty to improve air quality, create jobs and achieve our aim of every fresh car and van in the UK being ultra-low emission by 2040.
As part of the Go Ultra Low Cities announcement:
- London is awarded £13 million to create ‘Neighbourhoods of the future’ prioritising ultra-low emission vehicles (ULEVs ) in several boroughs across the capital
- proposals include over a dozen streets in Hackney going electrified with charging infrastructure such as car-charging street lighting, while Harrow will develop a low emission zone suggesting parking and traffic priority to owners of plug-in vehicles
- Westminster Council already provides free parking for ULEVs and London’s proposal aims to supply 70,000 ULEVs sold by two thousand twenty and almost quarter of a million by 2025
The scheme is also providing £5 million of development funding for specific initiatives in Dundee, Oxford, York and north east regions to help them play their part in kick-starting a country-wide clean motoring revolution. Fresh commuter charging hubs in Dundee will open up links across the region for plug-in vehicle owners, while solar-canopied park and rail hubs in York will help reduce air pollution in and around the city.
The £40 million announcement will also support very skilled jobs in the automotive industry by encouraging the sale of thousands of extra plug-in cars, many of which will be built and tested in the UK .
Poppy Welch, Head of Go Ultra Low said:
We’re excited to see the innovative ideas put forward by each of the winning Go Ultra Low Cities become reality over the coming months. The £40 million investment by government, combined with funds from each winning area, will convert the roads for residents in and around the four Go Ultra Low Cities.
With thousands more plug-in cars set to be sold, cutting running costs for motorists and helping the environment, this investment will help to put the UK at the forefront of the global ultra-low emissions race. Initiatives such as customer practice centres, free parking, permission to drive in bus lanes and hundreds of fresh, convenient public charging locations are sure to appeal to drivers and inspire other cities and local authorities to invest in the electrified revolution.
The Go Ultra Low Cities fund is just one element of a comprehensive £600 million package of measures from the Office for Low Emission Vehicles by two thousand twenty which also includes £400 million of assured money for individual plug-in car grants, investment in low emission buses and taxis, and research and development funding for innovative technology such as lighter vehicles and longer-lasting car batteries.
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