BRAZIL
It was an experiment to clear the air in polluted Sao Paulo, South America's biggest city, so as to allow Paulistanos breathe more easily. Motorists, depending on the last digit of the licence plate, were asked to leave their cars at home for one working day of the week in the month of August. The organisers of the scheme, Cetesb, the state environment agency, claimed that pollution fell by an average 14 per cent. But last month, pollution was back with a vengeance. Relatively free roads, which were marked by the absence of traffic jams, have become scenes of chaos and fumes yet again.
The experiment, however, was not received well by the motorists. Said Fernando Pinheiro Pedro of the environment commission at the Brazilian lawyers association, "This is eco-fascism. The state government is using pyrotechnics as cover for its incapacity to deal with the problem properly'. Cetesb's staff association also observed that the pollution statistics provided by the agency was incorrect as the scheme exempted old diesel trucks and buses, the main culprits of air pollution.
Related Content
- Funding a tuberculosis-free future: an investment case for screening and preventive treatment
- Renewables 2023: analysis and forecast to 2028
- Wind and solar benchmarks for a 1.5°C world
- Production gap report 2023
- Natural climate solutions and fire mitigation: early findings on the path to net zero
- Pulling the plug on fossils in power