Ulez expansion brings in £26m in first month as 57,000 drivers face daily charges

31 October 2023, 11:24 | Updated: 31 October 2023, 12:19

The expansion is thought to have made £26 million in its first month.
The expansion is thought to have made £26 million in its first month. Picture: Alamy

By Jenny Medlicott

The controversial Ulez expansion brought in £26 million during its first month, after nearly halving the number of non-compliant vehicles driving in Greater London, according to estimates.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

The number of polluting vehicles in London has dropped by 45 per cent since the launch of Sadiq Khan’s Ulez expansion, TfL has found.

About 77,000 fewer non-compliant cars and vans were driving on the roads in September, dropping from 170,000 to 93,000.

This means on average 95.2 per cent of vehicles now comply with the emission rules, the report suggests.

The compliance rate for outer London is now almost on par with the rate in inner London, where 96.9 per cent of vehicles comply with the rules.

Some 1,974,000 vehicles take to the roads of London on an average day - but TfL said the “high levels of compliance” meant that 2.9 per cent (57,200) had to pay the levy.

The Ulez charge applies to all vehicles that have emissions standards older than Euro 4 for petrol engines, or Euro 6 for diesel engines.

That means that petrol vehicles registered before 2005 and diesel vehicles registered before 2015 are likely to have pay the charge.

Drivers of cars, smaller vans and motorbikes that don't meet Ulez standards have to pay £12.50 a day to drive within the zone.

The Ulez expansion has reduced the number of 'dirty' vehicles on the road by 45 per cent.
The Ulez expansion has reduced the number of 'dirty' vehicles on the road by 45 per cent. Picture: Alamy

Lorries, buses, coaches and heavy vans that are non-compliant are charged £100 under the separate low-emission zone scheme, which already covers most of London.

“I’ve always said that the decision to expand the Ulez was very difficult, but a month on from the expansion we can already see that it is working,” Sadiq Khan said of the figures.

“This new data shows 95 per cent of vehicles seen driving in London on an average day now comply with our air quality standards – a 10 percentage point increase since I began to consult on the Ulez expansion in May 2022. This will make a huge difference to the lives and health of Londoners.”

TfL’s next target is for 91 per cent of vans to comply with the emission rules by the end of the year, as the number for vans currently sits at 86.1 per cent.

The report did not reveal, however, how much revenue had been generated by Ulez fines and penalties.

Read more: Belgium condemns Sadiq Khan's ULEZ as over 20,000 EU drivers ‘unlawfully’ fined in alleged criminal data breach by TfL

Read more: Laurence Fox arrested for endorsing vandalism and the destruction of Ulez cameras

The Ulez expansion led to protests among motorists in London.
The Ulez expansion led to protests among motorists in London. Picture: Alamy

An analysis by Tory mayoral candidate Susan Hall estimated that motorists would have paid £52.5 million when fines and levies were taken in to account, if September’s figures were repeated. This puts the estimated number for September’s figure at around £26 million.

“This proves once again that Sadiq Khan’s Ulez expansion is nothing but a tax grab,” Ms Hall said.

“To take over £52 million from hardworking people, with no gain to air quality described anywhere in this report, shows how little he cares for Londoners.

“It is those on the lowest incomes who are suffering most from this disastrous charge. As mayor, I will scrap the Ulez expansion on day one.”

Transport for London says all revenue is reinvested into running and improving the capital's transport network, such as expanding bus routes in outer London.

The Ulez is projected to stop making a surplus in 2026/27 as compliance levels increase.

The controversial Ulez expansion was launched an August 29. Drivers that don't pay the Ulez charge are fined £180. This is reduced to £90 if they pay early.

The penalty charge notices were issued from 26 September and for the first four weeks drivers were given warning letters rather than fines.

In the remaining five days of September, after the commencement of the penalty notices, 13,480 penalties were issued, meaning a possible total of £2,424,400 could have been made.

“I’m pleased to see that the London-wide Ulez has been effective at reducing the number and proportion of older, more polluting vehicles seen driving in London on an average day. I’m eager to see the impact that this will go on to have on air pollutant emissions in the capital,” Professor Kevin Fenton, London regional director, Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, said.

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

'Minuscule state' of RAF is 'utterly pathetic' meaning just one plane available for D-Day 80th anniversary parachute jumps

'Minuscule state' of RAF is 'utterly pathetic' with just one plane available for D-Day 80th anniversary parachute jumps

Infected blood campaigners meeting in Parliament Square ahead of the publication of the final report into the scandal

What is the infected blood scandal? Inquiry into biggest treatment disaster in NHS history due to publish findings

Obit Ebrahim Raisi

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi dies at 63 in helicopter crash

Obit Ebrahim Raisi

Iran’s president found dead at helicopter crash site

Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi has been killed in a helicopter crash along with Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and several others

Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi found dead at site of helicopter crash, state media confirms

China Taiwan Sanctions

China sanctions Boeing and two US defence contractors for Taiwan arms sales

Iran's president is missing after a helicopter he was travelling in crashed - with sources in Tehran warning his life is in danger.

'No sign of life' at crash site of helicopter carrying Iranian President, state television reports

Iran

‘No sign of life’ at crash site of helicopter carrying Iran’s president

Iran

Official says rescuers see helicopter that was carrying Iran’s president

Taiwan President

Lai Ching-te inaugurated as Taiwan’s president which will likely bolster US ties

Rescue teams’ vehicles are seen near the site of the incident of the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in Varzaghan in north-western Iran

Helicopter carrying Iran’s president apparently crashes in mountainous region

Rachel Reeves has said Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt are gaslighting Brits over the economy - as Labour analysis claims high inflation has cost workers almost the equivalent of a 1p hike in tax.

Reeves accuses Sunak of gaslighting Britain on economy as research claims Inflation 'costs UK same as 1% tax hike'

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is set to offer the first government apology for the infected blood scandal as the public inquiry into the disaster publishes its final report.

Sunak set to apologise for infected blood scandal which killed 3,000 as inquiry publishes report

Iran's president is missing after a helicopter he was travelling in crashed - with sources in Tehran warning his life is in danger.

Pictured: Iranian president's helicopter taking off just moments before crash in adverse weather

File photo dated 16/10/13 of HMP Barlinnie in Glasgow. The Scottish Government has been accused of moving at a 'snail's pace' in refreshing the prison suicide prevention strategy. The documen

'Up to 23,000 criminals each year to avoid jail' if Government loosens sentences as prisons fill up

Pep Guardiola has hailed his history-making Manchester City side but admitted his future at the club is in doubt after his sixth top-flight win.

'It's insane': Pep Guardiola hails Manchester City record-breakers as side wins fourth Premier League in a row