Skip to main content

Gothenburg, Sweden sees vehicle air pollution cut since congestion tax launch

Hazardous emissions from vehicle traffic have fallen in Sweden’s second largest city since the introduction of a congestion tax system. Gothenburg, a city of around 500,000 inhabitants, has seen a welcome fall in both nitrogen oxides and particulate matter, according to the city’s local authority.
October 31, 2013 Read time: 1 min
Hazardous emissions from vehicle traffic have fallen in Sweden’s second largest city since the introduction of a congestion tax system. Gothenburg, a city of around 500,000 inhabitants, has seen a welcome fall in both nitrogen oxides and particulate matter, according to the city’s local authority.

Related Content

  • RiverLinx consortium inks London’s Silvertown Tunnel deal
    November 27, 2019
    The RiverLinx consortium has reached financial close on the €1.17 billion Silvertown Tunnel project after a three-year procurement process by the client Transport for London.
  • Navtech Radar to showcase ClearWay radar-based safety and monitoring systems
    March 19, 2012
    Navtech Radar will be showcasing the safety and economic benefits of using longer-range radar systems for Automated Incident Detection (AID) and enforcement at Intertraffic 2012. The company’s ClearWay sensor technology is currently deployed in live tunnel and above-ground environments in Northern Europe and has been further developed to provide count and classification capabilities as well as an effective counter to illegal tailgating and unsafe lane-change manoeuvres.
  • New Malaysian highway to cut congestion
    April 22, 2014
    The new Kinrara-Damansara Skyway (Kidex) being planned for Malaysia is expected to help reduce traffic congestion. A study carried out by SKM-CB Colin Buchanan-Sinclair Knight Merz in 2011 indicated that the highway will be able to lower travelling time between Damansara and Kinrara by 25%. Meanwhile the volume of traffic in both directions from Puchong to Petaling Jaya will be lessened by 50%. From Taman Tun Dr Ismail, from Bandar Utama to Petaling Jaya and from the New Klang Valley Expressway (NKVE), traf
  • Special formwork for Moscow
    June 15, 2012
    Unusual staircase columns for pedestrian crossings outside Moscow required custom-made forms Every day the largest city in the largest country in the world is threatened with gridlock. The infrastructure of the present-day traffic system can no longer cope with the increased number of vehicles, and the urban administration of Moscow, Russia, resolved to upgrade the traffic arteries connecting the inner city to satellite towns. Greater Moscow (Oblast) has a population of over seven million, and to date