If the mayor of Paris holds sway, gas-powered cars will be gone from her city by 2030. Instead, citizens will get around via public transport, bicycles, and electric cars — and Paris will be on its way to carbon neutrality by 2050.
Mayor Anne Hidalgo's call on Thursday for an end to petrol-fueled cars on Paris roads by 2030 follows a previously announced plan to eliminate diesel cars from the city by 2024, when Paris
will host
"We are seeing a revolution in terms of mobility and on the issue of climate," Christophe Nadjovski, Paris deputy mayor in charge of transport and public space,
told
The mayor's office released a statement clarifying its aims after news outlets
reported
"No measure of prohibition or sanction is included" in the new climate plan for Paris, the mayor's office
said in the statement
The climate plan will be submitted to the
Council of Paris
The city's statement emphasized that it was going to make the transition easy for its citizens, pointing to
recent announcements
It also touted its investments in public transit and bike lanes. Authorities
say
In July, France's environmental minister Nicolas Hulot
announced
Hidalgo has already implemented a number of measures to reduce air pollution from cars.
After an atmospheric phenomenon known as inversion occurred last March, "the pollution levels in Paris briefly topped those of Beijing," NPR's Eleanor Beardsley
reported
Though advocates for car owners
have criticized
On Oct. 1, the city held "
a day without cars
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