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Lord Lawson says cycling is most damaging thing for London since the Blitz

Tory peer also says trying to get people on bikes is age-discriminatory - and gets slapped down

Lord Lawson has claimed that cycling is “doing more damage to London than almost anything since the Blitz.” Another Tory peer, Lord Higgins, has said that the Cycle Superhighways currently being built in the capital were responsible for more traffic jams and pollution.

The remarks were made during questions put to parliamentary under-secretary of state for transaport, Lord Ahmad, about Transport for London (TfL) in the House of Lords today.

Lord Higgins asked him whether  in view of the success of the conference on climate change over the weekend,” he would “have urgent discussions with Transport for London about the appalling increases in congestion and pollution caused by the introduction of bicycle lanes, which are in use in large numbers only in the peak period?

“Will he at least ensure that other traffic can use those lanes during the course of the day? In the present situation on Lower Thames Street, for example, they are likely to die from carbon monoxide or other poisoning from pollution any moment now.”

Another peer, Lord Sugar, recently took to Twitter to bemoan the fact that he had been held up in traffic while sitting in a car on Lower Thames Street – just days after he had taken delivery of a new Pinarello.

> Lord Sugar complains about London Cycle Superhighway works

The Cycle Superhighway works, however, are minor compared to two huge civil engineering projects currently underway in the city – Crossrail, and the so-called “Supersewer.”

Lord Ahmad said he believed the members of the house would all “acknowledge the benefits of cycling across London. I stress that the Mayor of London has primary responsibility for planning in London, along with the air quality strategy.

“The introduction of cycle lanes is partly to encourage more sustainable forms of travel across the capital,” he added.

Lord Lawson, who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Thatcher government from 1983-89, asked whether Lord Higgins had not been “absolutely right that what is happening now has done more damage, and is doing more damage, to London than almost anything since the Blitz?”

Some might suggest that the policies of urban planners in the decades following the devastation wrought by the Luftwaffe caused far more long-term damage than installation of the Cycle Superhighways will.

But Lord Lawson, a climate change denier who lives most of the time in France, also asked: “Is it not also hugely age discriminatory? There is a huge section of the population of a certain age, well represented in this House — I declare an interest — for whom cycling is not a practical option.”

“I suggest to my noble friend that it is never too late to start,” was Lord Ahmad’s laconic reply.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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45 comments

Avatar
Simon_MacMichael replied to Grizzerly | 8 years ago
5 likes

Grizzerly wrote:

Sadly,  poor old Nigel has been gaga for years.  The media either haven't or won't notice. 

They didn't with his former boss either, to be fair ...

Avatar
Simon E | 8 years ago
7 likes

"Never mind this, look at THAT OVER THERE!!"

Some people are obviously seriously worried about the popularity of cycling* in London, so much so that they abandon logic completely and can only resort to incomprehensible ranting.

As for the CS road works, well you can't make an omlette without breaking some eggs.

 

* and of course the accompanying clean air, reduced noise pollution, driver stress plus lower death toll etc etc

Avatar
bikebot | 8 years ago
7 likes

Actually, I think this deserves the James Corden response.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLP9mfLMmnc

And to paraphrase.  I'm glad Nigel Lawson lives in France, the value of the British economy goes up considerably, when he's not in it.

Avatar
danthomascyclist | 8 years ago
11 likes

Quote:

In the present situation on Lower Thames Street, for example, they are likely to die from carbon monoxide or other poisoning from pollution any moment now.

I agree.

 

But blaming people who use zero-emission vehicles? The mind boggles.

 

Does this idiot honestly think that if you made a few 1m wide bike lanes available for car use, and put every cyclist back into a car that this would put us in a better situation?

 

Sometimes people say something so stupid it stumps you and you don't know how to respond

 

Avatar
HalfWheeler | 8 years ago
5 likes

Pretty distasteful stuff. Is he saying a bike lane has done more damage to London than the IRA and Al Qaeda? 

Avatar
bikeandy61 | 8 years ago
4 likes

Just remember folks the HoL have got a lot of work ahead of them. They did actually do something useful with the Tax Credits vote. They've got a LOT of mental unbalanced acts to perform to counter a shock showing of reasonable behaviour.

Avatar
bikebot | 8 years ago
9 likes

Totalling killing the reputation of the House of Lords, for being a bunch of mad old people who spend most of their time complaining about the modern world.

Anyway, I didn't vote for him. Or Alan Sugar come to that...

Avatar
brooksby replied to bikebot | 8 years ago
0 likes

bikebot wrote:

Anyway, I didn't vote for him. Or Alan Sugar come to that...

You couldn't have, since they're in the Lords not the Commons...

And Lord Sugar went into the HoL as a reward for his services to reality TV or something anyway - he was never an actual politician.

Avatar
Beatnik69 replied to brooksby | 8 years ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

bikebot wrote:

Anyway, I didn't vote for him. Or Alan Sugar come to that...

You couldn't have, since they're in the Lords not the Commons...

I think that was bikebot's point...

Avatar
brooksby replied to Beatnik69 | 8 years ago
0 likes
Beatnik69 wrote:

brooksby wrote:

bikebot wrote:

Anyway, I didn't vote for him. Or Alan Sugar come to that...

You couldn't have, since they're in the Lords not the Commons...

I think that was bikebot's point...

I know - that was why I put an ironic winking face after my comment. Darn, but I cannot get the hang of these emoji things...

I stand by my comment about Sugar, though.

Avatar
bikebot replied to brooksby | 8 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:
Beatnik69 wrote:

brooksby wrote:

bikebot wrote:

Anyway, I didn't vote for him. Or Alan Sugar come to that...

You couldn't have, since they're in the Lords not the Commons...

I think that was bikebot's point...

I know - that was why I put an ironic winking face after my comment. Darn, but I cannot get the hang of these emoji things... I stand by my comment about Sugar, though.

If you start with the presumption that I'm flippant or sarcastic, you're usually on the right track.

Avatar
brooksby replied to bikebot | 8 years ago
0 likes

bikebot wrote:

If you start with the presumption that I'm flippant or sarcastic, you're usually on the right track.

Fair enough.  <offers handshake>

Avatar
bikebot replied to brooksby | 8 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

bikebot wrote:

If you start with the presumption that I'm flippant or sarcastic, you're usually on the right track.

Fair enough.  <offers handshake>

<fistbump> easier to do while pedaling  3

Avatar
swldxer | 8 years ago
4 likes

You can see out of touch he is talking about CO coming out of a cat converter.

Avatar
RTB replied to swldxer | 8 years ago
0 likes

swldxer wrote:

You can see out of touch he is talking about CO coming out of a cat converter.

 

Catalytic converters merely reduce CO through facilitating oxidation, CO is not entirely removed so yes CO is an exhaust gas post catalytic converter as is NO etc.

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