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Petrol-powered vehicles are exempted from particulate matter (PM) standards through to the Euro 4 stage, but vehicles with direct injection engines are subject to a limit of 0.0045 g/km for Euro 5 and Euro 6. A particulate number standard (P) or (PN) has been introduced in 2011 with Euro 5b for diesel engines and, in 2014, with Euro 6 for ...
Several local authorities in the UK have introduced Euro 4 or Euro 5 emissions standards for taxis and licensed private hire vehicles to operate in their area. [69] [70] [71] Emissions tests on diesel cars have not been carried out during MOTs in Northern Ireland for 12 years, despite being legally required. [72]
The LEZ emissions standards are based on European emission standards relating to particulate matter (PM), which are emitted by vehicles, which have an effect on health. The following vehicles are not charged: [21] Lorries, buses, and coaches that meet the Euro 6 emission standard. Vans and minibuses not exceeding 3.5 tonnes; All cars and ...
The criteria for charging is based on European emission standards: Motorcycles that do not meet Euro 3 standards (most vehicles pre-2007) Petrol cars and vans that do not meet Euro 4 standards (most vehicles pre-2006) Diesel cars and vans that do not meet Euro 6 standards (most vehicles pre-2015)
Unlike zones in London and Birmingham, which charge almost all drivers of non-exempt vehicles, Bath's is designated as a Class-C Clean Air Zone according to European emission standards: only higher-emission (pre-Euro 6 diesel and pre-Euro 4 petrol) taxis, vans, buses, minibuses, and other commercial vehicles pay to enter the zone, while private ...
In January 2021, it was announced that all buses in the fleet meet or exceed Euro VI emission standards, following the phasing out of older buses, the retrofitting of diesel vehicles and the introduction of new hybrid & electric buses. [4] In September 2021, TfL announced that all new buses entering service would be zero emission. [5] [6]
This page was last edited on 30 December 2013, at 06:32 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
There are six different coloured vignettes, relating to six categories. The category into which a vehicle falls depends on the engine type (electric, hydrogen, petrol or diesel) and the European emission standard (Euro standard). Where the emission standard is not recorded, the date of first registration is used instead to determine a category.