Author name: Steven Edwards

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Queensbury Tunnel: £7.2m work to stop tunnel collapsing complete – BBC News

:excerptstart The 1.4-mile (2.3km) Queensbury Tunnel was closed to trains in 1956 Work to stop a disused railway tunnel collapsing has finished at a cost of £7.2m, officials have said.  The 1.4-mile (2.25km) Queensbury Tunnel connects Holmfield, Halifax and Queensbury, on the edge of Bradford, beneath the Pennines in West Yorkshire.  National Highways said its lining […]

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Media accountability: Cars & Climate Change — IrishEVs

In March 2004 Ireland made history by becoming the first country in the world to introduce a comprehensive ban on smoking, resulting in the act of smoking being prohibited in pubs, clubs, restaurants and in workplaces.Importantly, this also changed how smoking was reported on in the media, with the conversation shifting to a scientific focus on the health implications.

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Bike carriages rolled out on West Highland rail line – BBC News


BBC News19 July

Three dedicated carriages for bikes are being introduced on one of Scotland’s most scenic rail routes in a scheme which ScotRail says is a UK first.
The Highland Explorer carriages will be in operation along the West Highland line from Glasgow to Oban from Monday.
They can accommodate up to 20 bikes and bulky gear including rucksacks and ski bags.
There are spaces for ordinary bikes, a limited number of tandem cycles and an e-bike charging socket.
The route takes passengers through Loch Lomond and the Trossachs to Oban.

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E-biking John o’Groats to Land’s End: Tony’s tips – Sustrans


In 2021, Tony and Linda Dobbs cycled 1,132 miles from John o’Groats to Land’s End on their e-bikes. A keen environmentalist, 73-year old Tony decided to support Sustrans by raising money on this long distance ride. Here, he shares his story along with some great tips for fellow adventurers.

Tony and Linda Dobbs began their e-bike JOGLE journey at Dunnet Head in Scotland.How the journey began: falling in love with e-bikes
Until 2019 I did not think of myself as a ‘cyclist’.
I’d used a push bike all my life and I rode around town and sometimes beyond, but only for a few miles.
Then, my wife tried an e-bike while we were on holiday in Belgium.

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Glasgow City Council unveil active travel network plan – Cycle Industry News


Liberty Sheldon7 October, 2021

Glasgow City Council have revealed its plans to build a city-wide network of active travel infrastructure for all parts of Glasgow.

Released as part of a new strategy to promote active travel, the plans will add 270km of high quality cycleways and improved footways along main roads in Glasgow.
Councillor Anna Richardson, City Convener for Sustainability and Carbon Reduction, said: “Safety is the number one reason for people being discouraged from using active travel and in particular, cycling.  The existing network is expanding and the Spaces for People project helped show the appetite for change. By creating a network of cycle lanes and associated footways that reaches into every corner of the city we will maximise the opportunity for active travel to be the first choice for everyday journeys.

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Analysis shows lower air pollution levels since 20mph scheme roll-out – London Borough of Richmond upon Thames


4 October 2021

Richmond Council has commissioned an independent assessment to review the levels of air pollution in Richmond upon Thames since the implementation of the 20mph scheme in late 2019 and early 2020. The assessment has now shown that levels have dropped since the lower speed limit was introduced.
The assessment took place in three locations, Queens Road, St Margaret’s Road and Petersham Road, and measured nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels before the implementation of the scheme and once the scheme had been established. 

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‘Green growth’ doesn’t exist – less of everything is the only way to avert catastrophe | George Monbiot | The Guardian


George Monbiot

There is a box labelled “climate”, in which politicians discuss the climate crisis. There is a box named “biodiversity”, in which they discuss the biodiversity crisis. There are other boxes, such as pollution, deforestation, overfishing and soil loss, gathering dust in our planet’s lost property department. But they all contain aspects of one crisis that we have divided up to make it comprehensible. The categories the human brain creates to make sense of its surroundings are not, as Immanuel Kant observed, the “thing-in-itself”. They describe artefacts of our perceptions rather than the world.
Nature recognises no such divisions. As Earth systems are assaulted by everything at once, each source of stress compounds the others.

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Pedestrian Fatality Rates Increase with Speed, So Don’t! | The Car Crash Detective


September 7, 2015 Mike

There are certain things just about “everyone” does when driving that makes driving less safe for just about everyone. Speeding is one of those things. It makes near-misses turn into collisions, it turns mild collisions into severe collisions, and it turns severe collisions into fatal ones.
I’ve written about dozens of collisions that could potentially have been survivable, had one or both drivers involved not been speeding. I’ve also written extensively about car technologies that are helping people survive collisions that would have been universally fatal just a decade or two ago on our roads, such as side impact intrusion resistance in cars, SUVs, minivans, and small vehicles. This is a topic that deserves as much attention as we can give it as a society.

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