News

The Clean Air Zone (CAZ) is a designated area around Bristol city centre, which will mean certain highly polluting vehicles will have to pay a fee each time they drive in.
Bristol has launched its clean air zone (CAZ) today (Monday, November 28), charging drivers between £9 and £100 per day to enter parts of the city.
Bristol’s data forecasts that the Clean Air Zone is having a positive impact on air quality. Data indicates that further NO2 concentrates will not exceed the Government's average annual legal limit.
Navigation app Waze has launched smart routing around Bristol’s Clean Air Zone to help drivers avoid unnecessary fines and reduce overall carbon emissions. Through the support of Waze’s volunteer Map ...
Bristol Airport includes information and a map of the Clean Air Zone on its website with a warning that routes from the M4 and the M5 north will take drivers through the zone. When the Clean Air ...
Bristol City Council has admitted its Clean Air Zone cameras may well be faulty after some of the first letters warning drivers they would be charged were sent to people who have never been to ...
Successful appeals by motorists fined for entering Bristol's Clean Air Zone outweigh rejections by more than three to one, figures show. Data from the Government's Traffic Penalty Tribunal shows ...
Bristol City Council is earning an average of £2.2 million a month from Clean Air Zone charges and the fines from drivers who haven’t paid, and that's the third biggest income in the country ...
Bristol has launched its clean air zone (CAZ) today (Monday, November 28), charging drivers between £9 and £100 per day to enter parts of the city.