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Stockholm to ban petrol and diesel cars in city centre

Stockholm council has announced plans to ban petrol and diesel cars in an area of the city centre, in order to improve air quality for residents.

Stockholm to ban petrol and diesel cars in city centre
Petrol and diesel cars will soon be banned in part of Stockholm city centre. Photo: Fredrik Persson/TT

In 2018, the Swedish government made it possible for local authorities to create so-called environmental zones to improve air quality. Stockholm will now be the first city in Sweden to introduce the strictest zone, class three, which bans nearly all diesel and petrol cars.

“Today, the air in Stockholm means that infants’ lungs are less effective and adults die early,” transport councillor Lars Strömgren said in a statement, citing a 2022 study from the Karolinska Institute. The study found that children who grow up on roads in the capital with particularly high emissions have worse-than-average lung capacity when compared to other children, from as early as six months old.

“This situation is completely unacceptable. We need to limit the dangerous emissions from petrol and diesel cars, and that’s why we’re introducing a class three environmental zone in one part of the city centre.”

On streets with a class three environmental zone, certain vehicles are banned, meaning, as a general rule, only electric cars and low-emission gas vehicles are permitted. In terms of heavy goods vehicles, low-emission hybrids are also allowed to enter the zone.

There will be some exceptions, such as emergency vehicles, other vehicles used in healthcare, and vehicles where a driver or passenger has a disabled parking permit.

The new environmental zone will be implemented in stages, starting on December 31st, 2024, with the area inside Kungsgatan, Birger Jarlsgatan, Hamngatan and Sveavägen. This will also include the entrance and exit of the Klaratunneln by Mäster Samuelsgatan. The zone encompasses 20 city blocks and covers around 180,000 square metres.

“The environmental zone is being introduced in an area where there are a lot of pedestrians and cyclists, where the air quality needs to improve. It’s also an area of the city centre where we can see high commitment to electrification, where there are key actors who can be a driving force in this transition,” Strömgren said.

“That’s why this is a good place to start.”

A number of property owners and transport companies in the area in question are already active in the Vinnova project, which focuses on developing more sustainable deliveries, among other things. Electric transport vehicles are quieter and are therefore able to be used at night, unlike traditional vehicles, which are louder.

The environmental zone will be extended in a second stage, which will be proposed in 2024 and voted on in the first half of 2025.

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WILDLIFE

Sweden releases 100 sturgeons in bid to bring extinct fish back to its rivers

The Atlantic sturgeon disappeared from Swedish waters around a century ago. But scientists just launched a ten-year project to change that.

Sweden releases 100 sturgeons in bid to bring extinct fish back to its rivers

In the opening act, 100 young sturgeons – transferred from a farm in Germany – were introduced into the waters of Göta älv.

“To be a person who has the possibility to re-introduce a species that has been extinct nationally, it’s a gift,” biologist Dan Calderon, who came up with the idea, told AFP.

“It’s probably the best thing I’ve done,” Calderon said.

Named Störens återkomst (“The return of the sturgeon”), the project is led by the Swedish Anglers Association, which is working with several universities and Gothenburg’s museum of natural history.

The species lived in the river until the late 19th century, but gradually disappeared due to overfishing and pollution.

Today, the river is much cleaner and conditions are again right for the sturgeon, which can measure over five metres (16 feet) and weigh more than 600 kilogrammes (270 pounds), according to the University of Gothenburg.

‘Hopeful’

“I also feel hopeful because this is really, really something good we are achieving here and this is a good start,” Linnea Jägrud, the project leader, told AFP.

The effects of the reintroduction on the river ecosystem will be closely studied by researchers.

Sturgeons feed off the bottom of the river, which helps oxygenate sediment on the riverbed, therefore benefitting the small creatures that live there.

Large sturgeons can also serve as a host fish for other species such as the sea lamprey.

“One hundred does not make a population, but with the ongoing work we will build up a strong population and we will keep working with restoring the river and restoring the coastal area outside,” Jägrud said.

Like salmon, the Atlantic sturgeon – recognisable by its pointed nose and scaleless skin – spends the first few years of its life in freshwater.

When it is large enough to tolerate salinity, it migrates to the sea in search of food and then returns to freshwater to spawn.

But it can take up to ten years for the river dweller to reproduce.

It will therefore be necessary to gradually reintroduce sturgeons every year for a decade so that they can form a population capable of surviving without human assistance, Jägrud explained.

European network

In order to map the characteristics of the river and its suitability for the species, acoustic telemetric receivers have been placed underwater and some fish fitted with transmitters to track their movements.

“These kinds of receivers are all over Europe, in European waters and also abroad,” Jägrud said.

“This means they’re all connected in the same tracking network meaning if ‘my’ fish go to Portugal or Spain or France or UK, the European tracking network will report back to me and I will know, oh, my fish released in June 2024, oh, it reached Italy,” she continued.

Spectators watching the release of the sturgeons. Photo: Adam Ihse/TT

A crowd gathered on June 18th on the shores of the Göta älv to witness the historic return.

“This is a place where very many Nordic countries had their meetings and big feasts,” said Miguel Odhner, mayor of the riverfront town Kungälv, explaining that royal guests often dined on the fish, which was caught in abundance at the time.

A sturgeon wriggles in the mayor’s hands before being plunged into the water, to the applause of the crowd.

“Now it’s time to pay back to nature,” Odhner said.

Article by AFP’s Olivier Feniet with Nioucha Zakavati in Stockholm

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