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Millions of pounds in ULEZ fines may have to be paid back to Europeans | UK News


European drivers could be paid back ULEZ and LEZ fines after a legal challenge against TfL (Picture: Getty Images)

Millions of pounds in ULEZ penalties may have to be paid back to European drivers following a legal challenge.

Lawyers representing Dutch lorry firms say fines worth up to £6.5 million have been issued unlawfully.

They have launched a legal challenge against TfL and its debt collection agency Euro Parking Collection (EPC), The Telegraph reports.

It’s the first legal challenge against both organisations and if successful could lead to more cases being brought before the courts.

Sadiq Khan’s controversial ULEZ (Ultra Low Emissions Zone) scheme, which was launched in central London in 2019 and extended to all London boroughs on August 29 this year, requires drivers with vehicles that don’t comply with certain emissions standards to pay a daily £12.50 charge.

Those who fail to pay the charge can be fined up to £180.

There is also the Low Emission Zone (LEZ), which covers most of Greater London and requires drivers of high-polluting heavy goods vehicles to pay a charge or face fines of up to £3,000.

A delivery truck with copy space in London, England.

A firm representing a number of Dutch lorry companies say their clients have been unlawfully fined (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)



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Both UK and non-UK drivers must abide by the ULEZ and LEZ rules, and TfL can use EPC to issue fines to those from outside the country.

Several individuals and firms from across Europe have criticised the schemes, with many claiming the rules are not adequately advertised so it’s easy for drivers to get caught out.

Now, Transport in Nood BV, a Dutch firm which is employed by Dutch travel companies to manage and pay fines, has applied for permission to launch a judicial review against TfL in the High Court.

It claims some companies have been left bankrupt by the ULEZ and LEZ fines.

Antonio Jose Calado Oliveira, owner of Transport in Nood BV, told The Telegraph: ‘People have been really impacted, I have seen people in tears over this, others have had to sell their trucks, it is completely unjust, and we need to get an answer from an English court to find out if this is correct.’

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan in Catford, south east London, on the first day of the expansion of the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez) to include the whole of London. The capital has become the world's largest pollution charging area with a ?12.50 daily fee for the most polluting vehicles. Picture date: Tuesday August 29, 2023. PA Photo. Mayor Khan has faced strong opposition to the scheme with protests against the plan and anti-Ulez vigilantes repeatedly targeting enforcement cameras installed in the new areas in recent months. See PA story POLITICS Ulez. Photo credit should read: Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan extended the ULEZ zone to the whole London on August 29 (Picture: PA)

He provided one example where a lorry driver who transports flowers to London was issued with nearly nearly 400 fines, which cost him just under €400,000.

Mr Oliveira said penalties accumulated by drivers over a period of time had often been sent out in bulk by EPC, meaning some firms got hundreds of fines in a single day.

The firm claims that if the fines had been sent out one by one as and when drivers inadvertently entered the zones the drivers could have changed their behaviour much earlier to avoid future penalties.

It also says EPC is using an excessively high exchange rate when converting the fines.

Mr Oliveira said: ‘We are launching this claim to get the fines that have already been paid to be repaid, and the court costs. We are talking millions of pounds.’

Traffic pass a signs indicating the ultra-low emission zone (ULEZ) near Hanger Lane in west London on July 22, 2023. Sadiq Khan intends to expand the Ultra-Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) to the whole of the British capital on August 29 -- barring a last-ditch High Court bid to stop it. The scheme -- first introduced in inner London in 2019 and separate from its two-decades-old congestion charge -- requires more polluting vehicles to pay a ??12.50 ($16) toll on days they are driven within its borders. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP) (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images)

The legal challenge against TfL claims ULEZ rules are not advertised well enough

He said his firm is only working with Dutch companies, but believes huge numbers of individuals and businesses across Europe will have been similarly affected.

Transport in Nood BV has enlisted UK law firm Smith, Bowyer and Clarke to represent them.

A TfL spokesperson told Metro.co.uk: ‘We have received a claim relating to Penalty Charge Notices from claimants based in the Netherlands and are considering our response.

The Metro has contacted EPC for comment.

TfL made around £22.8 million in ULEZ fines in September, which was the first month where the scheme covered the whole of the capital.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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