Thursday 1 August 2013

Review of LAQM: UWE Hosts Consultation Event


Today AQMRC will host a consultation event to consider Defra’s proposals to review Local Air Quality Management in England.  The full details of the consultation can be found here

In brief the purpose of this consultation is to seek views on the best way to address “shortcomings identified in Local Air Quality Management (LAQM) delivery in England.”  LAQM began with the Environment Act of 1995 and has led to more than half of the local authorities in the UK having one or more Air Quality Management Areas. Nearly all of the AQMAs are due to traffic sources and the vast majority have been declared from nitrogen dioxide.  The LAQM process has enabled the spatial and temporal extent of air pollution in the UK to be defined in much greater detail than ever before. This diagnostic phase of LAQM has been very successful.  It is worth remembering that the overarching purpose of LAQM was public health protection and the diagnostic phase of work identifies where public health risks may be present.

Each AQMA has an Action Plan associated with it which sets out the measures the Local Authority will take on their own, in partnership, or that will be taken by other agencies, to improve air quality and thereby reducing the risk to public health. It also sets out a timescale over which air quality in the AQMA will be brought back to compliance with the relevant air quality objective. This Action Planning phase of LAQM has been much less successful and very few AQMAs have been revoked because of the actions undertaken within the Acton Plan.  

The consultation document argues that the administrative burden of LAQM is significant and that the process does not usually take into account compliance with EU limit values.  The UK is finding it very difficult to meet EU air quality limit values and there is a significant infraction risk arising from that failure.  The consultation suggests that local authorities could focus their actions on what is needed to achieve these obligations and to reduce the public health impacts of poor air quality rather than to continue their current focus on local assessment and reporting.   

Defra identify 4 aims for the consultation and propose 4 options to address these aims.


Defra’s aims of the LAQM review are

1.       Local action is focused on what is necessary to support air quality improvements to benefit public health and to work towards EU air quality standards

2.       Local government and other stakeholders are clear on their roles and responsibilities and work together to improve air quality

3.       Local authorities have simple reporting requirements with less bureaucracy and more time to concentrate on actions to improve air quality and public health

4.       Local authorities have access to information about evidence based measures to improve air quality including on transport and communications


Defra identifies 4 options to meet these aims

 1 Business As Usual with limited changes

·         Retain separate local air quality regulations

·         Maintain review and assessment reporting cycle, but remove the need to carry out Further Assessments

·         Review the need for continued assessment and reporting on objectives that have been met

2 Concentration on Action Planning and focused reporting

·         All of option 1

·         Change focus from review and assessment to action planning. Through reducing reporting requirements – e.g. annual local air quality report to replace Updating and Screening Assessment (USA Report) cycle but local authorities still assess local air quality on regular basis

·         Reduced and more focused reporting – e.g. shorter annual local air quality report to replace larger 3 year cycle of reporting and progress reports

3 Alignment with EU requirements to meet air quality limit values

·         All of Option 2 plus Local authorities no longer required to carry out detailed assessments or to make/amend AQMAs

·         Consolidate and amend Air Quality (England) and Air Quality Standards Regulations so that local authorities work towards compliance with EU air quality limit values and targets where there is scope for action at the local level

·         No reporting requirements on local hotspots outside of the national assessment of EU air quality standards but a stronger interest and reporting on local measures which help to improve air quality and bring us closer to compliance with EU air quality standards

·         Local authorities would focus on action planning and public health and report on measures taken to improve air quality and these are included in reports to EU on compliance where quantified

4 Separate local air quality management duties do not exist

·         No separate LAQM duties but local authorities would still have to take account of air quality when appraising transport and development proposals and policies

·         Provisions for LAQM in the Environment Act would be repealed along with Air Quality England Regulations.

·         Air Quality Standards Regulations amended as per Option 3

·         No specific duties on local authorities to assess or report on air quality locally – greater reliance on national assessment to judge risks arising from transport and development proposals

The consultation is open until 30th August and you can contribute to the review at https://consult.defra.gov.uk/communications/https-consult-defra-gov-uk-laqm_review

AQMRC will be submitting our views to Defra. In outline our views are that

·         LAQM needs to be reinvigorated and its public health protection purpose restated and prioritised.

·         The Air Quality Regulations need to be updated and aligned more explicitly with EU Limit Values.

·         The Air Quality Strategy needs to be reviewed and updated redefining the contributions of national and local actors.

·         Local Authorities need support and encouragement to implement Action Plan measures.

·         Review and Assessment, the diagnosis of air quality problems or improvements, is an essential precondition for effective and targeted action to improve air quality. This must be retained although the current administrative arrangements can be improved.

·         In support of public health improvements Government needs to achieve greater internal coordination of departmental actions and to deploy these interventions more effectively.

·         Local authority actions can contribute to meeting EU Limit Values but the means by which this is reported needs careful consideration.

AQMRC has published extensively on the LAQM process since 1996 and some of our relevant publications are listed below. These chart the evolution of the process and helped identify many of the opportunities, concerns and challenges of air quality management.

Some of AQMRC’s LAQM Publications

Longhurst, J.W.S., Lindley, S.J., Watson, A.F.R.  & Conlan, D.E. (1996) The introduction of local air quality management in the United Kingdom. A review and theoretical framework.   Atmospheric Environment. 30 (23) 3975-3985.

Beattie, C. I., and J.W.S. Longhurst (2000) Joint working within local government: air quality as a case study. Local Environment.  5 (4) 401–414.

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst A. Simmons & D.M. Elsom (2000) Regulation and Practice of Local Air Quality Management in England's major urban areas. AWMA  Environmental Manager.  April pp49-55.

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst  and N.K. Woodfield (2000) Air quality management: challenges and solutions in delivering air quality action plans. Energy and the Environment 11(6) 729-747.

Ing,C., C.I. Beattie and J.W.S. Longhurst.  (2001) Progress with implementing local air quality management in rural areas of England. Journal of Environmental Management.61 (2) 137-147

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst and N.K. Woodfield (2001) Air quality management: evolution of policy and practice in the UK as exemplified by the experience of English local government. Atmospheric Environment. 35 (8) 1479-1490.

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst and N.K. Woodfield (2001) A preliminary analysis of the linkage between air quality management and transport planning policies in a sample of English Highways Authorities.  Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 44 (3) 391-408

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst and N.K. Woodfield (2002) Air Quality Action Plans: early indicators of urban local authority practice in England.  Environmental Science and Policy 5 463 – 470.

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst and N.K. Woodfield (2002) A comparative analysis of the air quality management challenges and capabilities in urban and rural English local authorities. Urban Studies 39 (13) 2469-2483.

Woodfield, N.K., Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., & Laxen, D.P.H. (2002) Designating Air Quality Management Areas (AQMAs) in the UK: Implications for Securing UK Air Quality Objectives.  Water Air and Soil Pollution. 2, 677-688

Woodfield, N.K., Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., & Laxen, D.P.H. (2003) Regional variation in the implementation of the local air quality management process within Great Britain. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 46 (1) 49-64.

Woodfield, N.K., Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., & Laxen, D.P.H. (2003) Critical evaluation of the role of scientific analysis in UK local authority AQMA decision-making: method development and preliminary results.    Science of the Total Environment. 311 (1-3) 1-18

Woodfield, N.K., Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., & Laxen, D.P.H. (2003) Judging the risk of exceedance: local authority decision-making for air quality management area designation.  Local Environment,   8 (4) 423 - 436.

Beattie, C. I., J.W.S. Longhurst and Elsom, D.M.  (2004) Evidence of integration of air quality management in the decision making processes and procedures of English local government. Local Environment. 9 (3) 255 – 270.

Chatterton, T.J, Woodfield, N.K., Beattie, C.I. & Longhurst, J.W.S. (2004). Outcomes of the first round of local authority air quality review and assessments under the UK's air quality strategy.  Journal of Environmental Monitoring, 6 849 - 853

Woodfield, N.K., Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., Chatterton, T. and Laxen, D.P.H. (2006). Regional collaborative urban air quality management: Case studies across Great Britain. Environmental Modelling and Software. 595 -599

Dorfman, P., Beattie, C.I., Burnet, F., Gibbs, D. C., Longhurst, J.W. S., Weitkamp, E. & Leksmono, N.S (2006) A conceptual model of the role of complex science in local authority consultations about air quality management. Local Environment 11 (4) 399 - 419.

Longhurst, J.W.S., Beattie, C.I., Chatterton, T., Hayes, E.T., Leksmono, N.S., and Woodfield, N.K. (2006) Local air quality management as a risk management process: assessing, managing and remediating the risk of exceeding an air quality objective in Great Britain. Environment International 32(8) 934-947.

Chatterton, T.J., Longhurst, J.W.S., Leksmono, N.S., Hayes, E.T. & Symons, J.K., (2007).  Ten years of Local Air Quality Management experience in the UK: An analysis of the process.  Clean Air and Environmental Quality, 41(4): 26-31.

Longhurst, J.W.S., Irwin, J.G., Chatterton, T.J,  Hayes, E.T. Leksmono, N.S., & Symons, J.K., (2009). The development of effects based air quality management regime. Invited contribution to 50th Anniversary Special Issue.  Atmospheric Environment   43 (1) 64-78. 

Dorfman, P.,  Gibbs, D.C., Leksmono, N.S., Longhurst, J. W. S., Weitkamp, E.L.C.  (2010) Exploring the context of consultation. The case of Local Air Quality Management. Local Environment 15:1 15 – 26.

Leksmono, N.S., Dorfman, P., Burnet, F., Gibbs, D.C., Longhurst, J. W. S., Weitkamp, E. (2010) Enhancing consultation practices on Air Quality Management in local authorities. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 53 (5)   pp 559 – 571

Olowoporoku, A. O., Hayes, E. T., Leksmono, N. S., Longhurst, J. W. S. &  Parkhurst,  G. (2010) A longitudinal study of the links between Local Air Quality Management and Local Transport Planning policy processes in England. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management   53  (3), 385 – 403.

Ross-Jones, M.J & Longhurst, J.W.S. (2010) Managing Air Quality at the Local level. A Case Study.  The International Journal of Sustainable Development & Planning 5 (3) 223–237

Longhurst, J.W.S., Olowoporoku, A. O., Barnes, J., Chatterton, T.J.,  Hayes, E.T. and Irwin, J.G. Exploring issues of process efficiency and outcome effectiveness in the United Kingdom’s Local Air Quality Management Regime.(2011) The International Journal of Sustainable Development & Planning 6 (3) 286 -298

Olowoporoku, A. O., Hayes, E. T.,   Longhurst, J. W. S. &  Parkhurst,  G. ( 2011) Improving road transport-related air quality in England through joint working between Environmental Health Officers and Transport Planners. Local Environment 16 (3) 603-618

Olowoporoku, A. O., Longhurst, J. W. S., Hayes, E. T.,   &  Parkhurst,  G. ( 2012) The rhetoric and realities of integrating air quality into the local transport planning process in English local authorities Journal of Environmental Management 101   pp. 23 -32.

Everard, M., Pontin, B., Appleby, T., Staddon, C., Hayes, E.T., Barnes, J.H. &  Longhurst, J.W.S. (2013, forthcoming)  Air as a common good.  Environmental Science & Policy DOI 10.1016/j.envsci.2012.04.008 Online November 2012.

Barnes, J., Hayes, E.T., Longhurst J.W.S., Chatterton, T.J  (2013) Air quality action planning: why do barriers to remediation in local air quality management remain? Journal of Environmental Planning and Management DOI: 10.1080/09640568.2012.762573 Online 3rd April 2013 pp. 1-22. ISSN 0964-0568

AQMRC
1st August 2013