Buses with green technology to reduce GHG emissions in England
Hundreds of buses in England will be given a green makeover to improve air quality. Almost 440 buses in England will receive a green technology upgrade, as the region works toward reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to improve air quality. According to an announcement from the Department for Transport (DfT), 18 local authorities made successful bids for about £7 million of funding to go ahead with the green tech plan, reported The Northern Echo. The buses will be fitted with a selective catalytic reduction to reduce N2O emissions. The hundreds of buses a part of the Clean Bus Technology F…
Hundreds of buses in England will be given a green makeover to improve air quality.
Almost 440 buses in England will receive a green technology upgrade, as the region works toward reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to improve air quality. According to an announcement from the Department for Transport (DfT), 18 local authorities made successful bids for about £7 million of funding to go ahead with the green tech plan, reported The Northern Echo.The buses will be fitted with a selective catalytic reduction to reduce N2O emissions.
The hundreds of buses a part of the Clean Bus Technology Fund will be equipped with a selective catalytic reduction (SCR). This is an exhaust gas treatment system that will help to lower nitrogen oxide (N2O) emissions. This particular greenhouse gas is blamed for thousands of deaths in the United Kingdom each year. The 439 buses that will be fitted with the green technology will include, among others, 34 in Gateshead and Sunderland and 121 in Yorkshire. It is expected that the upgraded vehicles in Gateshead and Sunderland will complete 150,000 journeys, annually, while those operating in York, Leeds, Harrogate, West Yorkshire and Sheffield will complete 420,000 cleaner journeys.