Public transport in Paris is set to be free on Friday due to high pollution levels. Photo: AFP
Paris
authorities have requested emergency traffic-limiting measures to be put
in place on Friday, as the City of Light and much of northern France
suffers from a choking smog.
City mayor Anne Hidalgo asked
national authorities to stop one in every two cars entering the capital
and make all public transport free for a day in a bid to drive down
pollution.
These emergency measures were last implemented almost exactly a year ago --
on March 17 -- during a particularly bad spike in the pollution levels.
(Spot the Eiffel Tower. The view over Paris on March 18th, 2015. Photo: AFP)
On Wednesday, the concentration of potentially dangerous particulates
in the air went over the recommended maximum, pressing authorities into
action.
According to one company Plume Labs, the level of these
particles rose so high, that Paris became the most polluted city in the
world for a few hours on Wednesday, topping the likes of the
notoriously smoggy Shanghai.
"It only lasted a few hours and
fortunately it's not reflective of the majority of the time," Romain
Lacombe from Plume Labs told
Le Parisien newspaper. His company measures
pollution levels in real time for around 60 cities across the world.
In Paris, authorities measure the concentration of particulates with
a diameter of less than 10 microns -- so-called PM10 -- in the air to
determine pollution levels.
These particulates are created by
vehicles, heating and heavy industry, and include the most dangerous
particles that measure less than 2.5 microns in diameter, which can
penetrate deep into the lungs and the blood system and can cause cancer.
The safe limit for PM10 is set at 80 microgrammes per cubic metre (mcg/m3).
According to a 2011 World Health Organisation report, the planet's
most polluted city was Ahvaz in Iran with an average of 372 mcg/m3.
Beijing had an average of 121 mcg/m3, while Paris was measured at 38 mcg/m3.
One study produced last year claimed that the air quality in
Paris was so bad that it was the equivalent of being in a room with eight smokers.