The Guardian

Driving into a city should become as antisocial as smoking | Gaby Hinsliff

Clean air zones, such as the one proposed in Birmingham, can work if we increase people’s options. Ministers must get involved
‘In Bristol there have been awkward questions about whether a ban would be fair on sick and frail people trying to reach hospitals inside the zone.’ Cyclists and buses in Bristol city centre. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA

Imagine a capital city where nobody has to die on the roads. It may sound almost impossible, but last year not a single pedestrian, cyclist or child lost their life on the streets of Norway’s capital, Oslo; the only fatality recorded was a motorist crashing into a fence. (By comparison 12 people were killed in, a city slightly smaller than Oslo, in 2017 – and over half of them were pedestrians or cyclists.)

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