Socioeconomic deprivation in the
Antwerp, Brussels, and Ghent Low Emission Zones, with NO2 overlay for 2022.
Credit: Environment International (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2025.109515
A
team of health and environmental researchers affiliated with multiple
institutions in Belgium, working together due to a request from health insurer
Mutualités Libres, has found that converting parts of cities to low-emission
zones (LEZs) improves air quality. In their study, published in
the journal Environment International,
the group compared air quality samples in LEZs with similar sites in other
cities without LEZs.
Over the past several decades, as
researchers have learned about air pollution damage to the human body, most
particularly the lungs, city planners have been working to make at least some parts of
cities less harmful.
That has resulted in the development of
parks and recreation areas, and more recently, LEZs, which are parts of the
city where automobile traffic is banned or where only vehicles that meet
certain standards (such as EVs) are permitted. In this new effort, management
at Mutualités Libres wanted to know if LEZs were having the desired effect.
The researchers collected air samples
from Brussels and Antwerp, which have recently put LEZs in place, and compared
air quality from before and after the LEZs were defined, along with other parts
of the city and other cities in Belgium.
The team found that levels of both particle pollution and nitrogen declined more rapidly in the LEZs than in other parts of the same city and similar parts of other cities. They also found that reductions could be observed as far away from the zones as 5 kilometers.
Antwerp, Brussels and Ghent Low Emission
Zones and 17 control cities without LEZs with adjacent areas of 1 km,
1–2 km, and 2–5 km. Credit: Environment International (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2025.109515
Percentage chronic use (≥90 daily
defined doses) of medicines for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obstructive
airway diseases, antidepressants, and antithrombotic agents across the Antwerp
and Brussels Low Emission Zones and control cities. Credit: Environment International (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2025.109515
Officials with Mutualités Libres note that breathing polluted air not only leads to a host of health problems, it also leads to higher health care costs. Particulate matter in car exhaust, they note, has been linked to many types of lung ailments from COPD to cancer. They also note that nitrogen dioxide has been linked to an increased risk of diabetes.
The researchers showed that by comparing air quality with data from patients covered by Mutualités Libres, they were able to see that use of antidiabetic drugs increased at a lower rate for people living in or near LEZs than in other parts of the same cities.
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org
Source: Low-emission
zones linked to improved air quality in Belgian cities
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