Bluestar to expand ‘air-filtering’ fleet following successful trial

News stories are free to read. Click here for full access to all the features, articles and archive from only £8.99.

All five buses operating on Bluestar 7 to recieve the air filter system

Bluestar, part of the Go-Ahead Group, is to expand its ‘air-filtering’ bus programme following a successful 100-day pilot and 9,000 miles covered in Southampton.

The trial, which launched in September 2018, saw a Bluestar ADL Enviro200 MMC mounted with a unique filter, cleaning 3.2 million cubic metres of the city’s air.

The company says the filter ‘exceeded all expectations’ for its potential benefit to the environment, extracting particulate matter (PM10) weighing a total of 65g from Southampton’s air – roughly the same weight as a tennis ball – over the course of the trial.

Following the success, all five buses operating on Bluestar 7 will be fitted with air-filters, cleaning the air on an 11.5-mile path running across the city.

Bluestar
The system has so far only been fitted to one ADL Enviro200. RICHARD SHARMAN

While the single bus has the capacity to clean the air on its route every 215 days, to a height of 10 metres, it will take just nine days for the newly-expanded fleet to achieve the same feat.

Go-Ahead’s estimates show that the expanded fleet could remove as much as 1.25kg of PM10 from the air every year.

If the air-filter was deployed on 2,500 buses across the UK, it could remove as much as 588kg of PM10 particles every year.

In parallel, Bluestar has been fitting solar panels to buses, with a total of 19 vehicles to have them in place by the end of July.

When five further buses are fitted with air filters, one of them will have a solar panel as well.

This will enable a trial later this year to see whether solar energy can be used to make the air filter completely self-sufficient.

Go-Ahead Group Chief Executive David Brown said: “When we launched the air filtering pilot, we wanted to play our part in tackling the crisis in urban air quality and show that buses could be an answer to pollution in cities.

“We already know that a fully loaded double-decker can take up to 75 cars off the road, reducing congestion and pollution, and now we have hard data showing that buses with the fitment of an air filter can actively improve air quality.

“Our air-filtering system has exceeded expectations on how it benefits the environment. Rolling it out on more buses is the next step for Go-Ahead, and we would encourage authorities to get involved and help us roll this out at a faster rate.”

 

Read more news stories here: cbwmagazine.com/category/news