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Noise radar in place at Villeneuve-le-Roi next to Paris airport Orly, France.
Noise radar in place at Villeneuve-le-Roi next to Paris airport Orly, France. Photograph: Charles Platiau/Reuters
Noise radar in place at Villeneuve-le-Roi next to Paris airport Orly, France. Photograph: Charles Platiau/Reuters

‘Noise radar’ in Paris will catch raucous cars and motorbikes

This article is more than 2 years old

System promises to issue tickets automatically in attempt to address sound pollution in the city

Paris has switched on its first noise radar as part of a plan to fine loud motorcycles and other vehicles in one of Europe’s noisiest cities.

The machine placed high on a street lamp-post in the 20th district in eastern Paris is able to measure the noise level of moving vehicles and to identify their licence plate.

“Too much noise makes people sick,” said David Belliard, the Paris deputy mayor. “For our health and quality of life … this first sound radar’s aim is to automatically issue fines for vehicles that makes too much noise.”

In the next few months the city will test whether the radar can accurately identify the number plates of roaring motorcycles or cars, after which the equipment will have to be officially approved by authorities by the end of 2022.

Paris plans to start issuing fines from early 2023, while the government deploys more noise radars in other French cities and tests out procedures for automating the fines as part of a 2019 mobility law.

Under existing legislation authorities can already sanction the owners of noisy vehicles, but police need to have the necessary equipment and catch the driver in the act. The new system will work like a speed radar, with automated fines.

“The problem is that police often have other things to do,” said Fanny Mietlicki, head of the Bruitparif agency that has pioneered the noise radar technology.

Other noise radars have been installed in the Ile-de-France region around Paris and in the cities of Nice and Lyon since late January. On Tuesday a second noise radar will be installed in western Paris.

A December 2021 study by Money.co.uk based on European Environment Agency data showed that Paris was one of Europe’s noisiest cities, with over 5.5 million people exposed to road traffic noise at 55 decibels or higher, compared with 2.6 million people in London and 1.7 million people in Vienna and Rome.

With Reuters

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