Oxford Is Banning Everything With An Engine - Starting In 2020

The British city of Oxford is going zero-emission from 2020, banning anything with an engine - including delivery vans - from a gradually increasing number of busy city streets
Oxford Is Banning Everything With An Engine - Starting In 2020

Well, how do you like this? Anything Paris can do, Oxford can look down its nose at. The English city, famous for its university and for generally hating cars in general, has announced a zero-emission zone starting in 2020.

This ban is more clearly-worded than the others we’ve seen. It’s a straightforward zero-emission policy, banning petrol and diesel cars as well as any hybrid that has a fossil-fuel combustion engine. So, if you live just outside Oxford, work in the centre and have just bought a Porsche 918 Spyder thinking you’d be safe from low-emission zone restrictions, Oxford City Council would like to tell you to get bent.

Oxford 918 Spyder owner? Unlucky.
Oxford 918 Spyder owner? Unlucky.

Actually, it’s not quite that bad. In 2020 just a few streets will start operating a policy that sees every vehicle with an engine banned. Even taxis and buses will be affected. Gradually, the whole city will be added to the scheme and even HGVs will be stopped from entering to deliver goods. If there aren’t widely available (and financially viable) electric trucks and vans by then… well, the people of Oxford will be in trouble, won’t they.

The full scheme won’t be in place until 2035, but busy city centre streets will be metaphorically roped off to combustion engines in just over a couple of years. How, exactly, are deliveries going to be made? Will the postal services have to invest in electric vans just for Oxford? This reeks of poorly thought-out political point-scoring.

Oxford Is Banning Everything With An Engine - Starting In 2020

Oxford’s EV infrastructure growth plans at this point are pretty pathetic. There’s half a million pounds on tap for charging points for taxis, and £800,000 more for – wait for it – a whole 100 charging points for residents. Yep, £8000 each for something you can buy yourself for your home or office for comfortably less than £1000. That’s including fitting, too. Here, good CTzens, is typical British council mismanagement at its finest. Idiots.

Meanwhile, the population of Oxford is currently about 160,000. A hundred charging sockets isn’t going to cut it. The council is throwing this new legislation around while the actual practicalities of making it happen – we call it ‘common sense’ – has been forgotten. Well done, guys.

Comments

Bumblebee 1

So no more lawnmowers either?

10/12/2017 - 22:54 |
0 | 0
The Stig's Canadian Cousin 1

I will buy a massive Dodge Ram that roals coal and drive around Oxford just to spite everyone with my licence plate covered.

10/13/2017 - 00:02 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

That’s a stupid idea. They better hope Tesla launch they’re new electric truck soon.

10/13/2017 - 00:50 |
0 | 0
Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

*their

10/14/2017 - 04:39 |
0 | 0
Cereal

I guess Oxford will have a new name, well at least to me, Cocksford

10/13/2017 - 02:10 |
6 | 0
DJ N

Darn, if we could develop hydrogen-running ICEs that would be nice…all they’d produce is water. Then again, fuel stations are going to be potentially more dangerous and a stronger block and head(s) will be needed…or is that not how it works?

10/13/2017 - 03:20 |
2 | 2
AAA Insurance

In reply to by DJ N

Look at nano aluminum, it could run on current gas cars.

10/13/2017 - 06:55 |
2 | 0
Olds Alero

This is why I’m glad that I don’t live in a small country.

10/13/2017 - 03:56 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

I’d love to see anywhere in the US try this XD

10/13/2017 - 04:42 |
2 | 0
Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

California: Hold my Starbucks coffee

10/14/2017 - 04:31 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Nothing stopping you from driving the ultimate eco machine but having a diesel generator running out of the boot

10/13/2017 - 06:05 |
0 | 0
Raptor867

What is the happing to this world

10/13/2017 - 06:05 |
8 | 0
HDose

I gotta feeling that these cities/countries who are banning petrol engine are just doing it to attract investors/visitors. Anyway, are their infrastructure is even ready for the the demand that will come?

10/13/2017 - 06:07 |
2 | 0

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