Giant cloud of Saharan sand and toxic air covers England in smog

Blackleaf

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People across England are being warned to avoid strenuous activity due to smog consisting of sand from the Sahara and local and European emissions.

Much of southern and central England has been coated with a layer of Saharan dust, whilst visibility is low due to the smog.

The elderly and those with lung or heart disease are among those warned against exercising outside.

In February, the European Commission launched legal proceedings against the UK for failing to reduce levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) air pollution.

On Wednesday, Defra (the Department for Food, Agriculture & Rural Affairs) admitted it was a "challenge" to meet air pollution targets near busy roads but said air quality had "improved significantly" in recent decades.

Forecasters say pollution levels could reach high levels later in the day and on Thursday, before clearing on Friday.

The BBC weather centre said the highest recordings were likely to be in East Anglia and the East Midlands, while moderate to high air pollution levels were also forecast for large parts of southern and central England.

Air pollution: High levels to spread across England


BBC News
2 April 2014
Pallab Ghosh


The pollution has caused a thick layer of dust to form on cars and buildings, as Pallab Ghosh reports

People with health problems are being warned to avoid strenuous activity after forecasts that air pollution will reach high levels in parts of England.

Defra issued warnings as high pollution levels were recorded on Tuesday.

The pollution - a mix of local and European emissions and dust from the Sahara - is forecast in parts of south England, the Midlands and East Anglia.

The elderly and those with lung or heart disease are among those warned against exercising outside.

In February, the European Commission launched legal proceedings against the UK for failing to reduce levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) air pollution.

On Wednesday, Defra (the Department for Food, Agriculture & Rural Affairs) admitted it was a "challenge" to meet air pollution targets near busy roads but said air quality had "improved significantly" in recent decades.

Protection: A cyclist uses a pollution mask in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, as a potentially lethal cloud of Saharan sand, toxic air and local pollution sits over Britain


Prime Minister David Cameron's car has been covered in Sahara dust

Defra has a 10-point scale for measuring air quality - with level one implying a "low" risk of air pollution and 10 warning of "very high" levels.

Levels are determined by the concentration of five pollutants in the air, including NO2, sulphur dioxide (SO2) and ozone.

High levels of air pollution are usually reached about five times a year, Defra said.

On Wednesday, levels were recorded at six - meaning moderate - in East Anglia and south-east England, with pollution readings reaching level five in London and areas of north-east England.

However, forecasters say pollution levels could reach high levels later in the day and on Thursday, before clearing on Friday.

The BBC weather centre said the highest recordings were likely to be in East Anglia and the East Midlands, while moderate to high air pollution levels were also forecast for large parts of southern and central England.





In parts of Wales, areas around Wirral and Merseyside, as well as Devon, levels were likely to be moderate.

On Tuesday, pollution levels hit the maximum of 10 in north-west Norfolk.

Dr Keith Prowse, honorary medical adviser to the British Lung Foundation, warned higher pollution levels could have a "significant impact" on people with respiratory conditions.

"People who use a reliever inhaler should make sure that they carry it with them. If they feel that their conditions are worsening then they should contact their GPs," he said.

Kay Boycott, chief executive of Asthma UK, said the two-thirds of people with asthma who find that air pollution makes their condition worse "will be at an increased risk of an attack".


Eight million Londoners woke up to poor visibility this morning as air pollution lowered levels of visibility in the capital

The air was hazy as Oxford University's rowing crew took part in a training session ahead of the Boat Race


Warnings have been issued for people with asthma, lung disease and heart disease

Health experts said the "vast majority" of people would suffer no harm from the pollution levels

Advice on the Defra website states that for high levels of pollution "adults and children with lung problems, and adults with heart problems, should reduce strenuous physical exertion, particularly outdoors, and particularly if they experience symptoms.

"People with asthma may find they need to use their reliever inhaler more often. Older people should also reduce physical exertion."


BBC Weather's Carol Kirkwood explains the reasons behind the increase in pollution levels

It adds that "anyone experiencing discomfort such as sore eyes, cough or sore throat should consider reducing activity, particularly outdoors".

A Defra spokeswoman said: "The high level of air pollution this week is due to a combination of local emissions, light winds, pollution from the continent and dust blown over from the Sahara.

"We want to keep improving air quality and have introduced a new five-day forecast service in addition to investing heavily in local and transport initiatives to tackle this issue head-on."

Meanwhile, Maria Arnold, from the environmental law group Client Earth, called for changes to the way pollution warnings are given, saying the public was "generally very poorly warned about these type of events".

"We think the [warning] format needs to become very similar to the warnings for floods and heat waves. It is really important people understand the risks."

Friends of the Earth air pollution campaigner Jenny Bates said air pollution was a "national disgrace".

"There's not much we can do to control dust from the Sahara, but the authorities could and should be doing far more to deal with the UK's contribution to this air pollution episode, particularly from road traffic emissions," she said.

Not a good day for seeing far: A misty bird's eye view of London from the Shard building near London Bridge. With a population of eight million, London is Europe's most polluted city

Winding river: Air pollution in London this morning as the Government warns people with breathing problems to stay indoors

Distant: The Millennium Dome is shrouded in smog in London, as seen from a viewing gallery in the Orbit sculpture at the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park during a tour organised for the media

Analysis


Roger Harrabin
Environment analyst

Air pollution is the world's single biggest environmental health risk, according to the World Health Organization.

It is linked to about seven million deaths a year, mostly from heart and lung diseases.

The causes are outdoor pollution from traffic and industry, and indoor pollution from dirty stoves. But dirty air is an invisible threat, and it's taken a wind from the Sahara to blow it into UK headlines.

The wind lifts desert dust high into the clouds several times a year. The dust provides vital fertiliser for the ocean and even the Amazon forest.

But in the UK it is combining with high levels of local air pollution to irritate people's lungs.

People with heart disease or lung disease or the elderly should take the health warnings seriously.

The episode may draw attention to the government's long-term failure to reduce air pollution.

The EU has launched legal proceedings against the UK for failing to reduce "excessive" levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) air pollution - mostly from traffic - after 15 years of warnings.

HEALTH EFFECTS

Those with existing lung and heart conditions may find symptoms worsen

They should avoid doing too much, especially outdoors

Healthy people may experience minor symptoms such as a sore throat or a tickly cough

They should avoid strenuous activity in order to reduce such symptoms



BBC News - Air pollution: High levels to spread across England
 
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mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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England's really been getting shyt on this year when it comes to weather.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Are we being duped yet again by the enviroMentalists?

The left wing BBC (yep, they're in trouble again), who are in thrall to the Great Global Warming Swindle, have been accused of overegging it, and whipping up a frenzy about the smog which has enveloped much of southern and central England.

But there are those who are now questioning the dire warnings to people's health that have been issued over the smog.

Prime Minister David Cameron told BBC Breakfast that he gave up his regular morning jog today because of the air quality.

However, sceptics pointed out Mr Cameron was at the BBC studios in Salford, Greater Manchester, where there is only a moderate pollution level today.

By the way, the EU launches legal proceedings over the UK because of its poor air quality, yet a lot of the bad emissions in our air come from, guess where? Yep, Continental Europe!

Yet another reason to vote UKIP.

Is Saharan dust cloud just a load of hot air? Experts divided over whether health risks associated with smog cloud actually exist as PM gives up his morning jog because of 'poor air quality'

Conditions caused by dust from Sahara, emissions from Continent, low south-easterly winds and local pollution

Smog-like conditions are not expected to clear until tomorrow, with pollution levels already reaching 9/10 today

Millions of asthmatics are said to be at risk and schoolpupils in London are kept indoors by worried governors

DoH member praises 'good approach', but Public Health England director insists 'vast majority of people' are fine

Hospitals in Norfolk, King's Lynn, Brighton and London say they have seen no noticeable impact on admissions

London Ambulance: 14% rise in calls for breathing problems - and people should 'use us only in an emergency'

West Midlands Ambulance reports a noticeable spike in call-outs linked to breathing problems and chest pains

PM: 'It's a naturally occurring weather phenomenon - it sounds extraordinary, Saharan dust, but that is what it is'


By Mark Duell
3 April 2014
Daily Mail

Britain’s air quality has plummeted thanks to a perfect storm of Saharan dust, emissions from the Continent, low south-easterly winds and local pollution.

But experts were at odds today over whether the health dangers that have been associated with the smog cloud over the past few days actually exist.

While school pupils were kept indoors and millions of asthmatics were said to be at risk, it was also claimed there was no health risk to most people.

The smog-like conditions are not expected to clear Britain until tomorrow, with pollution levels already reaching level nine out of ten this morning.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) warned that the South East, East and Greater London were worst affected.






Protection: Ellie Kingsford and her son Alfie, six, wear masks in St Neots, Cambridgeshire (top), while birds float on the Serpentine Lake in London's Hyde Park (bottom)


Poor visibility: Heavy smog hits Central London for a second day today. The City is just visible through the smog. It is the worst smog to hit London for 50 years


Smog: View from Greenwich Park in south-east London today after some people have been advised to stay indoors due to high levels of air pollution

But Paul Cosford, director of health protection at Public Health England, said ‘the vast majority of people’ would suffer no harm.

He added: ‘It's a small number of days of very high air pollution levels. The pollution will go down towards the end of the week.’

The advice comes after a warning that parts of England are experiencing the highest level of air pollution ever recorded by Defra.

But a similar high alert was issued three weeks ago with much less fanfare, when pollution levels were in fact higher in London than yesterday.

The latest alert could have received more attention because the Met Office has just taken on responsibility for giving Defra pollution forecasts.

Defra had been given its information on pollution until this week by a private firm called Ricardo-AEA, according to the Daily Telegraph.


Pollution in the capital: The Houses of Parliament and Big Ben are pictured as heavy smog hits Central London for a second day today


Hard to see: Tower Bridge and HMS Belfast in Central London today. High air pollution levels of level 7 were measured in the capital yesterday


Still exercising: A cyclist wears a mask with an air filter as he cycles through Hyde Park in Central London


Walking to work: Commuters cross London Bridge in the smog this morning, with Tower Bridge in the background

In one of the worst-hit areas, Norfolk and Norwich Hospital said it ‘hadn’t seen any change’ in breathing-related admissions over the past 24 hours.

But Prime Minister David Cameron gave up his morning jog today because of the air quality, saying: ‘It is unpleasant, and you can feel it in the air.’

He told BBC1's Breakfast: ‘The advice I would give to people is listen very carefully to what the Met Office is saying about the weather.

'Public Health England's website, you can look at that. Or just go to the Government's website, which will give you the latest in terms of medical advice.

‘I didn't go for my morning run this morning. I chose to do some work instead. You can feel it.

'But it's a naturally occurring weather phenomenon. It sounds extraordinary, Saharan dust, but that is what it is.’

However sceptics pointed out Mr Cameron was at the BBC studios in Salford, Greater Manchester, where there is only a moderate pollution level today.

Energy Secretary Ed Davey took out his blue inhaler in the Commons as he MPs that he was among those suffering from the high air pollution levels.

Following a query on pollution during Energy Secretary's Questions today, he said: ‘I'm sorry he is suffering. I can show him that I am suffering too.’


Across much of England, moderate to high air pollution levels were measured yesterday, with level 8 (high) in the South East and Eastern regions.

And there was a level 7 (high) of pollution in London, where some schools banned pupils from outdoor playgrounds to reduce their exposure.

The decision was supported by Professor Frank Kelly, professor of environmental health at King's College London.

Professor Kelly, who is also on the Department of Health's Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollution, said it would help reduce long-term harm.

‘As a general response this is a good approach as children tend to run around outside and therefore breathe deeper,’ he told The Guardian.

‘Thus, on days like this they will be aspiring a lot more pollution if outdoors than when they are breathing normally (hopefully) inside.’


The smog of London: Authorities have warned people with heart or lung conditions to cut down on tough physical exercise outdoors


By foot: A woman strolls through Kensington Gardens as smog surrounds Kensington Palace, the home of of William, Kate and George, in Central London


'It sounds extraordinary, Saharan dust': Prime Minister David Cameron told BBC Breakfast that gave up his regular morning jog today because of the air quality. However sceptics pointed out Mr Cameron was at the BBC studios in Salford, Greater Manchester, where there is only a moderate pollution level today.


Aid: Energy Secretary Ed Davey took out his blue inhaler in the Commons today as he told MPs that he was among those suffering from the high air pollution levels


Hazy: The River Trent in Nottingham and Nottingham Forest's City Ground are surrounded by smog and haze as record levels of air pollution will continue to plague the UK, experts have warned

BBC'S DAVIS: DID WE OVEREGG IT?



Evan Davis admitted on BBC Radio 4 this morning that the Today programme team were worried whether they had whipped up too much of a frenzy over yesterday's pollution warnings.

The presenter said: 'We were wondering whether we'd slightly overegged it yesterday, but we needed have worried - everyone else has obviously gone quite hard on this.’

During the paper review, Davis looked at The Sun - which had a picture of the UK covered in sand on its front page (below) - and said: ‘I have to say it didn't quite feel like that in London.’

The BBC's environment analyst Roger Harrabin said on yesterday's programme: 'The situation now is really quite serious for people who have heart or lung problems, they are advised not to exercise outdoors.'

He added: 'Environmental organisations accuse the government of playing it down. The government say they don't want to cause a scare.'


HOW THE DUST STORM HAPPENS

A 'coincidence of climatic and meteorological influences', according to experts, has led to Saharan sand being whirled high into the sky and whisked across Africa and mainland Europe before coming down.

A sandstorm over Algeria last week saw sand launched high into the atmosphere.

The Sahara is one of the largest deserts in the world and is often battered by strong winds.

With the wind currently arriving here from the South/South-East, the conditions were in place to carry that sand over Cornwall. Then, light persistent rain brought it down to earth.

When that rain dried, it left the sand as a visible residue on cars across Cornwall, London, western Wales and Ireland.

The dust is lifted up and transported long distances from the Sahara several times a year, particularly in the summer, according to forecasters.




Read more: Is Sahara dust cloud just a load of hot air? Experts divided over smog cloud | Mail Online
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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I think anything that comes here from Africa should bugger off back to its own country.