Africa’s first roadside vehicle emission data sensors went live in Johannesburg, the wealthiest city in South Africa, in July. The goal is to measure the tailpipe carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from a batch of 100,000 vehicles daily. To date, no city in sub-Saharan Africa has implemented car emission-free zones like those in Paris or Amsterdam.
South Africa is the 13th most carbon-polluting economy on earth. Raeesa Moolla, an air quality expert at the city’s Wits University, reports that inhaling toxic air has resulted in 5,000 deaths, mainly from cardiovascular problems. Nationwide 429, 000 premature deaths are linked to dirty air, with coal power stations in Mpumalanga, ‘the electricity belt’, creating the majority of the problem.
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