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Mexico City curbs cars in first pollution alert since 2002

 Mexico City authorities have issued the first air pollution alert in 14 years due to high ozone levels, restricting traffic, encouraging children to stay indoors and ordering factories to cut emissions.

Mexico City: Mexico City authorities have issued the first air pollution alert in 14 years due to high ozone levels, restricting traffic, encouraging children to stay indoors and ordering factories to cut emissions.

The city government declared the "environmental contingency" on Monday and decided to keep it going through Tuesday following a surge in ozone concentration, which can cause respiratory and heart ailments.

Officials urged people in the metropolitan area of 21 million people to avoid outdoor sports while kids and seniors were advised to stay indoors.

Federal authorities ordered factories in the greater Mexico City area to slash their emissions by 40 percent.

Older cars were ordered out of the streets of a city where a honking mess of more than 5.5 million vehicles chug along every day.

The last time the emergency was issued was in September 2002.

The alert took residents by surprise as thick smog descended on the city just two days after the skies were unusually clear thanks to high winds that blew away hundreds of trees.

The alarm rang after ozone concentration surpassed the 190-point limit, surging to 194.

"There`s no wind and this situation has not allowed the dispersion of pollutants," Tanya Muller, the city`s environment secretary, told Radio Formula.
Muller lamented a Supreme Court decision that imposed changes last year to the city`s "No Driving Today" program, which limits the number of days that older cars can be on the street.

The city must now take into account the levels of pollutants to impose restrictions on cars older than 2007. The change, Muller said, has added more cars to the streets.

"We need to restrict vehicular traffic. What we are experiencing today is clearly the consequence of having 1.2 million (more cars) in less than a year," Muller said.The pollution alert marks a reversal of years of progress made by the city to improve air quality after the United Nations declared the Mexican capital the world`s most polluted city in the 1990s.

During that decade, ozone levels reached 398 points. The environmental contingency was declared 12 times in 1993 alone, according to the Megalopolis Environmental Commission.

Headed by left-wing mayors since 1997, the capital has launched various programs to reduce harmful emissions by modernizing the public transport system and encouraging the use of bicycles.

But Hector Riveros, a physics expert at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, said there are still hundreds of small buses known as "microbus" and taxis that have pollution levels that are four to five times worse than cars.

The solution, he said, is to eliminate sulfur from gasoline, provide cleaner taxis and microbuses, and make speed rules more flexible so that "engines work more with maximum efficiency."

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