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AbstractAbstract
[en] Concern for continuing poor urban air quality, caused primarily by motor vehicles emissions, and the slow progress being made towards reducing total vehicle emissions by long-term measures, such as improving fuel and vehicle technologies, has prompted some authorities to try to reduce the severity and duration of high air pollution episodes by implementing short-term traffic restraint measures. This paper reviews the range of episodic air quality management schemes applied in cities around the world and comments on the effectiveness of such schemes. The difficulty of targeting vehicles according to the contribution they make to the air quality problem is highlighted. The problem of some schemes simply causing a displacement of the area of excessive vehicle emissions rather than reducing total emissions is reviewed. Rapid developments in telematics and improved urban air quality and traffic monitoring networks (e.g. Urban Traffic Management and Control systems) may offer significant improvements in the effectiveness of episodic management schemes in the future. (Author)
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Source
Brebbia, C.A.; Power, H. (Wessex Inst. of Technology, Southampton (United Kingdom)); Jacobson, M. (Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA (United States)) (eds.); Wessex Inst. of Technology, Southampton (United Kingdom); Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA (United States); Advances in Air Pollution Series v. 6; 1087 p; ISBN 1 85312 693 4;
; 1999; p. 239-249; WIT Press; Southampton (United Kingdom); Air pollution 7: 7. international conference on air pollution; Stanford, CA (United States); 26-28 Jul 1999

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Book
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Conference
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