No, I don't have figures because they don't exist.(And that's me leaving out all the government figures - which I'm assuming you'll just try to dismiss as some sort of "conspiracy"). You'll also notice I've taken a figure that's lower than some of those. That's because of this excellent analysis:
which points out the huge statistical uncertainty, and the fact that many of those would have died anyway, within a relatively short space of time. Although, even that last point is debatable. If you killed a 98 year old dear by running her over, I don't think you'd get very far in court, using the "but she would have died soon anyway" defence...Winton Centre Cambridge
Winton Centre for Risk and Evidence Communicationwintoncentre.maths.cam.ac.uk
And, of course, not all of these deaths will be down to air pollution from road vehicles. (Just "most" of them....).
If you have figures that you regard as more accurate, I'm willing to see them.
Your "figures" are guesses and models which are totally fabricated.
Similarly to when in the 80s they were wrongly guessing that in 2010 London would be on the coast and with tropical climate.
At the time I remember seeing figures, graphs and statistics: all fabricated to fit the model.
Actual number is what's recorded.I think you mean there's been one where the coroner has specifically mentioned it in his report? For the actual number, see above...
Unless you tell me that people who had their death recorded as covid, in reality died of something else, so doctors are liars.
I think car pollution is bad, but I also consider pros and cons.Nope. Even today (never mind at the time of the ban) there are people who still don't think smoking is bad for you! (Just like, 20 or 30 years from now, there will be people who don't think vehicle emissions have any detrimental effect on health. It will just be small number who think that - just like it's a smaller number who think vehicle emissions are bad today, than it was 20 years ago. The only real difference, is that you have come to accept that smoking is bad for you, whereas you clearly haven't reached that point on vehicle emissions yet.
Poverty is bad as well.
Malnutrition is bad.
Being cold because there's no heating is bad.
Going to work whilst sick is bad.
Take your pick.
BINGO!Might it just possibly be because air quality is only ONE factor in determining mortality?
Now strike a balance.
There you go.Who said anything about making people poorer? I'm about £200-£300 a month better off, running an EV. Now of course, I'm a special case because it's a company car, but then, nobody is telling you (or anyone else) that you have to go out and get an EV tomorrow. We all know they are expensive to buy, and will remain so, until the market matures. What we CAN see, however, is that they're coming down in price all the time. And, of course (as the anti-EV brigade loves to point out), they depreciate faster. So you can't have it both ways, I'm afraid. They can't be too expensive AND suffer terrible depreciation, because if that were really true, the second hand ones wouldn't be unaffordable
You're one of them who don't care because it doesn't affect you personally.