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Johannesburg urban vehicle emissions initiative to generate data for clean air policies

8th August 2025

By: Schalk Burger

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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The Real Urban Emissions (TRUE) Initiative Johannesburg project, launched by the University of the city (UJ) and the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) on July 21, will use remote sensing technology to monitor emissions from vehicles in Johannesburg and the broader Gauteng region and generate data that will inform decision-making.

The project is part of the Breathe Cities initiative, which collects data on air quality from a network of 14 cities, mainly in developing countries, and shares the information with all stakeholders, including communities, to identify effective practices that improve air quality, said Breathe Cities project director Mike Saxton.

Data is the critical ingredient for effective policy-making and data-driven decision- making, but is often insufficient, incomplete or inconsistent, explained UJ Process, Energy and Environment Technology Station (UJ-PEETS) sustainable sociotechnical systems manager Nickey Janse van Rensburg.

Solid data enables politicians and policy- makers in cities to see and understand the issues. This also helps to ensure that they are more likely to know that the projects in which they invest their political capital can address the problems and have a measurable impact, added safe and sustainable mobility international charity FIA Foundation deputy director Sheila Watson.

The City of Johannesburg (CoJ) wants to improve the air quality in the city. A recently undertaken poll among citizens found that 92% of respondents expressed concern about air quality, said CoJ air quality management head Musa Mahlatji.

“Through initiatives like Breathe Johannesburg and our forthcoming Clean Air Zone, we are taking evidence-based action to reduce vehicle emissions and protect the health of our communities. TRUE will give us the real-world data we need to shape effective policy and deliver cleaner, healthier streets for every resident of our city,” he said.

The air pollution in Johannesburg exceeds national air quality standards and World Health Organisation guidelines, including for particulate matter of 2.5 micrometres and 10 micrometres in diameter, and nitrogen oxides (NOx), he noted.

“During the 2024/25 financial year, we had only 65% of good air quality days in the city. One of the main sources of pollution is vehicle emissions, which account for more than 75% of NOx emissions,” he highlighted.

There was a lack of robust data on vehicle emissions to effectively design policies that promote emissions reduction. The TRUE Johannesburg project will increase access to high-quality data to support more evidence-based policy-making and thereby reduce the health impact of poor air quality and advance environmental justice, Mahlatji said.

The city is implementing several initiatives to manage vehicle emissions, including an emissions control strategy, completing the feasibility study for a low-emissions zone and is currently undertaking work on its clear air policy, he said during the launch.

“This TRUE project will assist us with real-time data to identify the high emitters and to inform our strategies.

We are aspiring to launch the Clean Air Zone in Johannesburg in two to three years. To manage emissions and classify high-emitting vehicles, we need to know the data and then put in place the appropriate and required control or mitigation measures to achieve this.”

The city can then enact by-laws and restrictions to maintain this Clean Air Zone, such as potentially placing time restrictions on high-emission vehicles in the area or requiring a certain level of performance from vehicles according to a set standard, he suggested.


Meanwhile, remote sensing technology company Opus COO Javier Buhigas detailed the remote sensing technology that is being used in the project, with testing already having started in Johannesburg.

The company provides two models of remote sensing technology; one is a fixed system and the other a portable system. Both systems use infrared beams that cross the road to reflectors and then look at the absorbed light to identify and quantify the molecules emitted by passing vehicles, including CO2, NOx and ammonia, among others, he said.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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