Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2019-10-14)

(Antfer) #1

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◼ REMARKS


A yearago,mywife,Leslie,andI embarkedonanadventure,
movingwithourtwosonsfromSeattletoLondon.Weputthe
boys’playhouseonthestreet,huggedourcedartreegoodbye
and,seeminglyinaneyeblink,landedatHeathrow,wherethe
kindcrewoftheBritishAirways 747 broughtoursons,then
7 and5,intothecockpit.Theyperchedonseatscoveredin
furrysheepskinwhilethecaptain,strangely,confidedhisdis-
appointmentinhisdaughter’snewcareerasa veterinarian.
Itwasa kindofhomecoming.I’dlivedinLondonin
my20s,duringtheheydayofOasisandTonyBlair—Cool
Britannia—andwasexcitedtoreturnasa seasonedjournal-
ist.Wemovedintoa semidetachedhouseinCrouchEnd,
nearcricketpitchesandtenniscourts,acrossfroma stopfor
theW7busthattookmetotheTubeandontoBloomberg’s
officesintheCity.It wasInstagrammablestuff,exceptfor
thepungentchlorine-likesmellofexhaustfromthediesel-
poweredcars,buses,andtaxiscrowdingLondon’ship
streets.EvenFortnum& Masonsmelledlikea petrolstation.
Nocity’sperfect.Weenteredbadsmellsinthedeficit
columnofourmoveandtriedtosettlein.Bylastfall,two
monthsafterwe’darrived,I noticedthata raspyfeelingin
thebackofmythroatneverreallywentaway.Myvoicehad
a newresonant depth, like a smoker’s. My chest felt tight. My

asthma,a routineconditionI’dmanagedwithoutaproblem
inSeattle,wasflaringupinLondon.
I wenttomylocalNationalHealthServiceclinic,entered
anexamroom,andblewintoaspirometer. My lung capac-
ity was 5% less than normal; nothing unusual to the doctor,
who handed me a peak flow meter and a spacer, a plastic
holding chamber for an inhaler—the kind my mother uses
in her nursing home—and told me to come in if I noticed
any big changes. At the pharmacy I picked up inhalers, pow-
ders, and pills in a square white bag, folded over at the top
like Chinese takeout.
Anyone who’s seen The Crown knows about the Great
Smog of 1952, when thousands died from coal pollution
during a cold snap and London was, in Cyril Connolly’s
famous phrase, the “largest, saddest, and dirtiest of great
cities.” Before that were the pea souper fogs (also coal smoke)
ofVictoriandays.I’dreadaboutrecentconcernsoveremis-
sionsofparticulatesandnitrogendioxide(NO2) , tiedlargely
tothemassiveadoptionofdieselvehicles:12.4millioninthe
U.K.today,upfrom1.6millionwhenI leftin1998;andacross
Europe,morethan 50 million. But I’d assumed, like many in
the West, that pollution was a Third World problem and that
stringent-seeming European Union regulations were gradu-
ally cleaning the air.
Now, my own lungs burning, I began noticing things I’d
looked past in the pell-mell of everyday life: One London
friend’s strapping teenage son had asthma; another’s daugh-
ter suffered from unexplained breathing problems. I spot-
ted a twentysomething taking a squirt from his inhaler
before watching a National Theatre production of Antony
& Cleopatra. The city’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, has adult-onset

SCAN


THE


LONDON’S


OF


● And Europe’s, as heavily subsidized
diesel engines endanger health

● By Peter Robison

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