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Mexico City Plans Car-Driving Ban To Fight Air Pollution (csmonitor.com) 90

An anonymous reader writes: Mexico City plans to implement a car-driving ban from April 5 to June 30 in an effort to fight high air pollution levels. Under the city's new program, all privately owned cars must remain off streets one day per week as well as one additional Saturday per month. The initiative comes after the city issued a four-day air quality alert on March 14, after the city experienced air pollution at double the national acceptance level. "The definitive 'no circulation' program will align with the new rule for vehicular verification that will be presented soon," tweeted federal Environment Secretary Rafael Pacchiano. "In addition to the car ban, the commission is also working on medium-term solutions like improving public transport."
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Mexico City Plans Car-Driving Ban To Fight Air Pollution

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  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @09:12AM (#51837301)

    Mexico city toll bypass rates can go up now but keep under what a bribe to a local cop will be.

  • by Roadmaster ( 96317 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @09:13AM (#51837305) Homepage Journal

    So, without RTFA, the summary is misleading. It makes it appear like this program is a novel thing that has never been done.

    In reality, Mexico City has been keeping a percentage of vehicles off the road for pollution fighting purposes since 1989. Vehicles stay off the road one working day per week according to their license plate's last digit.

    Newer (10 years old or newer) cars were allowed to drive every day. Also, while all cars have to pass mandatory emmissions control, that had no effect on whether they could be on the road (so for instance, a newer but more polluting car would be able to go out every day while an older, potentially less-polluting car would have to stay home one day a week).

    Earlier this year a court mandated that the permit to be on the road daily should be tied to the car passing emmissions control. More cars on the road are part of the reason why pollution levels reached a high-enough level to prompt the government to remove all exceptions to the program and have all cars, irrespective of age and pollutant output, stay home one day a week.

    Incidentally, this program is part of the reason why there are so many cars in Mexico City: faced with the prospect of not being able to use the car once a week,many families bought a second car to also have coverage on the first car's off-the-road day.

    • Increasingly there's another way to get around these days when you are banned from a city centre, or have to pay pollution justified tolls. Other than running a second car.

      Drive an electric car. They're usually exempt. (Not sure specifically about Mexico City, but most places.)

      • I know only one person that drives a hybrid car in Mexico City. Yes, they are exempt. But the cars are just too expensive for the population to even consider.

        I believe this will be the solution at some point, but nowadays, we are still quite far from it being possible.

    • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @09:58AM (#51837593)
      I've been to Mexico City and the program doesn't work. Middle-class families just have an extra car and take the correct one based on the day of the week. It only penalizes poor people.
      • by tsqr ( 808554 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @10:17AM (#51837717)

        It only penalizes poor people.

        If the goal is to maximize the number of cars kept from operating, discriminating against the poor might be the most effective measure. Given Mexico's minimum wage of $5.00/day and the country's level of income inequality (ranked worst among OECD countries), poor people greatly outnumber the rest of the population.

        • by Alomex ( 148003 )

          poor people greatly outnumber the rest of the population.

          Except that they don't. Mexico is now about evenly divided between working class and middle class:

          Mexicoâ(TM)s middle class 47% of households

          http://mexiconewsdaily.com/new... [mexiconewsdaily.com]

          • by tsqr ( 808554 )

            poor people greatly outnumber the rest of the population.

            Except that they don't. Mexico is now about evenly divided between working class and middle class:

            Mexicoâ(TM)s middle class 47% of households

            http://mexiconewsdaily.com/new... [mexiconewsdaily.com]

            According to the linked article, fully half of this so-called middle class do not own a vehicle. This flies in the face of the contention that middle-class families will simply buy a second car to work around the restriction. On the other hand, if they don't own a vehicle, the restrictions won't have much of an impact, will they? And I'm guessing it's probably safe to assume that if half the middle class families don't own cars, then car ownership is even lower in the poorer-than-middle-class demographic.

      • by gwolf ( 26339 )

        I live in Mexico City, have lived here for most of my life.

        It does help. A lot. Of course, in my opinion, at least.

        Buying a second car is not so much of a problem, but for many, finding where to park it every night would be an important deal. Also, paying ~MX$500 (nowadays, roughly US$25-30) for the twice-a-year verification, plus many other recurring costs, can seem like negligible – But it's not.

        I believe I am in the middle to upper-middle class socioeconomic group. Still, I make close to the minima

        • We do have a good, although quite overcrowded, mass transit system.

          Wait for the third train. It's almost always empty.

      • by NetNed ( 955141 )
        Also the program doesn't work because it's the factories of Mexico City that create all the pollution. PR stunt is all it is.
    • by gwolf ( 26339 )

      Nice to read you, old friend! ;-)

      Just adding to your comment: This program has yielded great results since 1989. You can check daily graphs showing the amount of different pollutants over time [df.gob.mx]. I do remember the early 1990s as being terrible. Our air nowadays is mostly-OK... But yes, over 25 years have passed since this program started, and it should be reviewed for the city's newer reality.

  • I own two cars.
  • If the Holo sticker no longer does anything, then why spend the extra money to get smog checks? Won't this remove the incentive for drivers to get lower emission vehicles leaving them with the disincentive of the additional costs for smog reduction with now no benefit for those added costs?

    Until now vehicles have been exempt from Mexico City's "no circulation" rules if owners obtain a holographic sticker from a smog-check center certifying them as lower-emission......Environmental Commission of the Megalo

    • by gwolf ( 26339 )

      You are missing some bits.

      Every car that complies with the standards now gets a "no restrictions" hologram ("0"). Depending on the emissions level, you might get "0", "1" or "2". A newer car with terrible motor conditions will surely get a higher hologram (which means, more restrictions). I sold last year my 12-year-old car, which was able to get a "0" as I kept it in good shape.

      What we have now is a temporary "flattening" of conditions; we will all have effectively-"2" restrictions, as the air was too pol

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        What we have now is a temporary "flattening" of conditions; we will all have effectively-"2" restrictions

        Where do pure electric cars fall into this scheme; which effectively have negative emissions (If carrying a bunch of extra passengers who would otherwise be driving their own Gas-burning vehicles) ?

        • They fall into the "2expensive4me" category.
        • by gwolf ( 26339 )

          Besides being too expensive, as malditaenvidia already pointed out, they are permanently exempt of the twice-yearly verification every other car must undergo.

          Note, however, that they are *not* zero emissions, much less negative emissions: Except for hydroelectric plants, all other electricity generation schemes also carry some sort of pollution tag. Yes, it's usually "freed" in a much less polluted area (is that good or bad?) and I understand it's much more efficient than burning fuel in the motor. But it's

  • Air pollution from traffic kills more people than collisions. And every one of them is a "hit and run".

  • People have multiple cars to multiple decals to get around it: http://www.hoy-no-circula.com.... [hoy-no-circula.com.mx]
    Is time to go electric and impose emission taxes to factories with strict zoning regulations.

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