London taxpayers destroy over 100 climate cameras per month, police say

London’s Metropolitan Police have recorded 510 crimes related to damaging or removing ULEZ climate cameras in the five months between April and August, a new report says.

Ultra-low emission zones (ULEZs) are areas in London accessible only to low-emission vehicles. Cars that do not meet the city’s environmental standards are charged £12.50 ($16) for entering the ULEZ. Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) cameras positioned around the zones read license plates and check them against the vehicles’ make and model in real time. If a vehicle does not meet the environmental threshold, the fine is levied against the car owner. Failure to pay can lead to fines as high as £258 ($331).

The ULEZ climate mandate has drawn heavy protests from residents, including hunger strikes and refusal to pay fines. Taxpayers have also taken to disabling the ANPR surveillance cameras which Transport for London (TfL), the city’s transportation department, said will be used both for climate and law enforcement.

Between April 1st and August 31st, police recorded 351 incidents of destruction to ULEZ cameras and 159 removals, reports Sky News, an average of over 100 a month. Of those incidents, 171 reportedly occurred since August 17th alone, just before the ULEZ mandate officially expanded to include all outer London boroughs. Two individuals have been arrested in connection with the incidents, one of whom was charged.

The individuals likely belonged to a group of citizen activists who call themselves the Blade Runners and have promised not to rest until every ULEZ camera is removed or destroyed “no matter what.”

One reported Blade Runner said,  “In terms of damage it's way more than what [London Mayor Saidq Khan and TfL] have stated.”

“Snipping, damaging with hammers, painting, disabling on a circuit level and removing,” he added. “They are unbolted and they are snipped. The tools they use to install them are the ones we use to remove it. We don't want this. It's a way to try to . . . restrict our movements. F*** them. It will not happen because we haven't done anything to deserve it.”

Anyone caught vandalizing a camera may serve up to four years in jail.

In the meantime, the city has started placing black boxes around the cameras’ wirings to protect them from being cut.