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Asia Noise News

International Year of Sound 2020

Organisational Structure for the International Year of Sound 2020

The founder of Geonoise Michel Rosmolen will be pro-active in the promotion of the Year of Sound 2020 as member of the steering committee for Asia Pacific, focussing on South-East Asian countries.

An array of exciting events and activities for the International Year of Sound 2020 will originate with the ICA centrally, the ICA Member Societies, groups involved with acoustics, and with La Semaine du Son. These are described in more detail on the Activities page.

Coordination of events will be an important part of the International Year of Sound, to keep everyone informed about what is being done across the world and to publicize the events. In this regard, several committees have been put in place:

  • Coordinating Committee with representation from all ICA Member Societies and International Affiliates
  • Liaison Committee to provide coordination between the ICA and the Semaine du Son organisations
  • Steering Committee to coordinate all activities of the IYS 2020 which will include events managed by the Coordinating Committee and the Liaison Committee

Additionally, activities organised by other groups (Affiliated Groups) will be publicized.

Coordinating Committee

The IYS Coordinating Committee is comprised of representatives from each ICA Member Society and ICA International Affiliate. Each member organisation/society is asked to nominate a coordinator to be the primary contact with the ICA IYS steering committee The coordinator will discuss with the organization/society the events/activities that can be undertaken during 2020 and will help to promote one or more aspects of acoustics. The list of representatives, so far, is:

OrganisationRepresentative
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)Keeta Jones
Belgian Acoustical Society (ABAV)Secretary of ABAV
Canadian Acoustical Association (CAA)Jérémie Voix
Acoustical Society of China (ASC)Li Fenghua
Acoustical Society of Croatia (HAD)Kristian Jambrošić
German Acoustical Society (DEGA)Brigitte Schulte-Fortkamp
Intl. Commission on Biological Effects of Sound (ICBEN)Mark Brink
Institute of Noise Control Engineering (INCE-USA)Patricia Davies
Acoustical Society of India (ASI)V.R. Singh
Iranian Society of Acoustics and Vibration (ISAV)Mahoud Golzari
Acoustical Society of Italy (AIA)Sergio Luzzi
Acoustical Society of Japan (ASJ)Akio Ando
Acoustical Society of Korea (ASK)Sung-Hwan Shin
Acoustic Society of the Netherlands (NAG)Erik Roelofsen
Acoustical Society of Singapore (SAS)Woon Siong Gan
Sociedad Espanola de Acústica (SEA)Antonio Pedrero
Turkish Acoustical Society (TAKDER)Konca Saher

Liaison Committee

The International Year of Sound is working closely with La Semaine du Son (LSdS) with the goal to expand the opportunities for the activities of LSdS following coordination with more national organisations and will provide the opportunity for the expansion and continuation into the coming decades. The ICA and LSdS have created a Liaison Committee to coordinate the IYS 2020.

ICA: Michael Taroudakis and Marion Burgess

LSdS: Christian Hugonnet, Jean-Dominique Polack and Nicolas Lounis

Steering Committee

An ICA-IYS 2020 Steering Committee will be formed to coordinate all the activities of the IYS 2020, which will include events managed by ICA Member Societies and supporting Organisations. Members of this Committee will be representatives from all the ICA Regions.

Coordinators: Marion Burgess and Michael Taroudakis

Regional responsibility:

Europe/Africa: Michael Vorländer, Antonino di Bella, Antonio Perez-Lopez
Asia/Pacific: Jeong-Guon Ih, Kohei Yamamoto, Michel Rosmolen
Americas: Mike Stinson, Fausto Rodrigues, Julio Cordioli

The next ICA President, Vice President, and Treasurer will join the Committee after their election in September 2019.

Affiliated Groups

Does your group, committee, or organisation wish to hold an outreach or educational event during IYS 2020 to help raise awareness of the importance of sound in our lives? Let us know via the Event Form and we can include your events in our Calendar of Events.

  • United Kingdom Acoustics Network (UKAN)
    contact: Charlotte Swain
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Asia Noise News

Police Delhi catch and seize 500 loud exhausts of Royal Enfield Motorcycles

Police Delhi catch and seize 500 loud exhausts of Royal Enfield Motorcycles

Noise pollution on Indian roads is a major cause of concern with commuters honking incessantly thus creating a lot of commotion and ill-effects. Motorists using aftermarket exhausts on their vehicles also add greatly to noise pollution and it is illegal to use too. Currently, a police drive in Delhi is seeing the cops catch Royal Enfield motorcycles in large numbers for breaking the law by using aftermarket exhausts, reported Cartoq. According to a video posted by Royal Soldier on Youtube, police personnel can be seen forming teams to catch the lawbreakers and issuing challan for using illegal exhausts. They can further be seen removing the exhausts on the spot so that bike owners cannot make use of them again.

In the video, the cops can be seen removing the exhaust on the spot where they have nabbed a particular Royal Enfield and then carefully marking them to keep a record. It is not known if the motorcycles were allowed to be ridden by the owners without exhausts, reported Cartoq. Notably, any vehicle can create loud noise if the exhaust is not installed and Royal Enfield is known to produce the characteristic thump on being started. The noise emanated can become extremely unbearable without the exhaust. The cops were also seen catching modified motorcycles with loud aftermarket horns and pressure horns, reported Cartoq. Extremely loud horns, if they exceed a specific noise level, are illegal in India and vehicles can be booked for noise pollution. The cops in the video can be seen removing the horns too and marking them carefully.

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Asia Noise News

Curbing lavish weddings, cut noise pollution, New Delhi, India

The decision is based on a report prepared by a panel of officials of the Delhi Government after the Supreme Court of India was ticked off about the wasting of tonnes of foods at such weddings.

The top court, while hearing a petition on the reported starvation deaths of three girls in the national capital, wanted to know the views of Delhi Government on food wastage at weddings, restaurants, and hotels.

A four-member panel set up by the Delhi Government drafted a policy, which is now under the consideration of the government. The policy entails several restrictions, like the number of guests based on the capacity of the venue, use of horse-carriages and bands, ban on firearms, compliance of pollution norms for diesel power generating sets, mandatory distribution of surplus food to the underprivileged through voluntary organisations.

The report also recommended heavy penalties for operators of wedding venues and also on organisers and caterers. There are around 300 marriage halls in Delhi, but during the peak wedding season, 30,000 to 50,000 weddings take place every day, most of which are held in parks and other public spaces.

The wedding services market in India is worth $54 billion, according to a market survey carried out by Matrimony.Com, a web network of matchmaking services. The survey indicates that 10 to 12 million marriages take place in India every year. The survey revealed that the money spent on each marriage is a minimum of Rs. 10-20 lakhs (approximately $14,600-$29,000).

A recent wedding ceremony of India’s richest corporate honcho Mukesh Ambani’s daughter was estimated to have cost $100 million. The former first lady of the US Hillary Clinton and business tycoon Henry Travis were among the guests and over 1,000 limousines were deployed to chauffeur the guests around.

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Asia Noise News

Studies have shown a relationship between noise and increased risk of hypertension, heart attack and angina.

Studies have shown a relationship between noise and increased risk of hypertension, heart attack and angina.

Mathias Basner, a scientist dedicated to the study of noise in a lecture on TEDMED talks about how noise affects health and sleep people, reports the online edition of the Chronicle.info with reference for a New time.

In our day, silence is a rare pleasure, and the price is our health. Surprisingly high price, as it turned out. Fortunately, we have things to do today — each of us personally and society in General — to better protect your health and enjoy the benefits of silence.

I assume most of you know: the high level of noise leads to hearing loss. Whether you go with a concert or bar, if you experience ringing in the ears, you can be sure that you already have damaged hearing and, most likely, it is irreversible. Hearing loss is no joke. However, the noise is damaging our health in other ways. They are not well known, but just as dangerous as impaired hearing.

So what do we mean when we speak about noise? Noise is defined as unwanted sound, which includes the physical component, that is, the sound as such, and the physiological component — the circumstances that make this undesirable sound. A good example is a rock concert. The spectators who came to the rock concert does not consider the performance of musicians noise even with the volume at 100 decibels. They enjoy the music and even pay a hundred dollars for a ticket, so whatever loud music may be, they do not perceive it as noise.

For comparison, someone living three blocks from the concert hall, trying to read a book but can’t focus because of the music. Although the sound pressure in this situation is much lower, people perceive this music as noise that can provoke a reaction, which over time will adversely affect his health.

So why is it so important to be able to enjoy the silence? Because, in addition to hearing loss, the noise has an impact on human health overall. However, in our time is becoming increasingly difficult to find a quiet place in view of the constantly increasing number of vehicles, urbanization, unfolding construction, air conditioners, machines for harvesting leaves, lawn mowers, outdoor concerts and bars, players and neighbours having parties till three in the morning.

In 2011, the world health organization estimated that each year in Western Europe due to noise pollution lost 1.6 million healthy years of life. One of the results of noise impact is the creation of communication barriers. You have to speak louder to be understood. In the worst case, may even be necessary to interrupt communication. In a noisy environment, the probability that it will be misinterpreted. This is a possible explanation for why the children attending schools in noisy areas, academic achievement lower than their peers, as evidenced by the conducted research.

Another result of the impact of noise on the body is the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in people exposed to certain noise levels over a long period of time. Noise causes stress, especially if we are not able to control it. Our body produces stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol, which alters the composition of the blood, as well as the structure of blood vessel walls, which become less elastic in just one night in a noisy room.

Epidemiological studies have shown a relationship between noise and increased risk of hypertension, heart attack and angina. And despite the fact that this risk accumulates in small doses, it poses a great problem for public health because the noise is everywhere, and he affected many of us.

A recent study showed that reducing the noise pollution of the environment by only five decibels, Americans annually would save $3.9 billion, which today are spent on the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. There are other diseases, such as cancer, diabetes and obesity, which are also associated with the influence of noise, but we do not yet have sufficient evidence that the noise is the cause of their development.

Another important consequence of noise pollution is sleep disturbance. Sleep is an active mechanism for the body, it prepares us for the next phase of wakefulness. The silence in the bedroom is the key to what researchers call “hygiene healthy sleep”. And our auditory system is the guard, which carries out constant monitoring of the external environment, identifying potential threats, even when we sleep. Therefore, the noise in the bedroom prevents to fall asleep quickly.

Because of the noise, we can Wake up in the night. It can also prevent the normalization of blood pressure during sleep. There is an assumption that if the result of the noise a person experiences insomnia for several months and even years, the risk of cardiovascular disease increases. However, often we are not aware of the sleep disturbances caused by noise, because during sleep a person is unconscious.

We conducted a study of the impact on sleep traffic noise. Waking up in the morning, many of the subjects told us: “I slept great, once fell asleep and never woke up”. But when we looked at made during sleep recording physiological reactions of subjects, we saw that they woke up and their sleep was very intermittent. These periods of wakefulness was too short so that the subjects were awake and in the morning nothing of them remembered. However, these periods can significantly affect how relaxed people feel after sleep.

So what sounds are considered too loud? The first sign is that you have to change their behaviour. To be understood you have to speak louder. Or you turn on the TV on high volume, avoid being outdoors or close the Windows, moving the bedroom on the ground floor of the house or even installing insulation. A move to less noisy areas but, of course, not everyone can afford it.

What can we do right now to improve our sound environment and protect the health? First, if you think some sounds are too loud, do not be silent about it. Many theatre owners seem to think that in the movie, just go deaf. If you complained about the noise, but there was no response, ask for a refund or leave it. This language, as a rule, administrators know very well.

Also explain to children that noise affects health and what if now they will listen to loud music, then in older age they will have to reap the rewards.

You can also move the bedroom in the quietest place in the house: the noise of street transportation you will protect the walls of your home. Seeking rental or purchase of housing, give preference to locations that are in quiet areas. Visit the place of your future residence at different times of the day, ask neighbours about how noisy things are in this area.

Wear noise-cancelling headphones while travelling or in the office, if your building a high level of background noise. In General, looking for a quiet place, especially at weekends or during the holidays. Let your body relax.

By the way, four years ago, I visited Japan for a conference on the issues of noise pollution. When I returned to the United States, already at the airport I covered the sound wave. This suggests that we have ceased to realize that are constantly subjected to noise pollution and what value we are a quiet space.

What else can you do? There is such a thing as a carbon footprint. By analogy, there is a noise trace. And there are things we can do to make this footprint smaller. For example, it is not necessary to mow the lawn on Saturday at seven in the morning. Your neighbours will say thank you for it. Or use a rake instead of a blower. In General, it is most reasonable to limit the noise at its very source, so when you are going to buy a new car, air conditioning, blender, or something else, give preference to those models that create less noise. Many manufacturers indicate the level of noise generated by their merchandise, and some even advertise it. Take advantage of this information.

Many believe that the solution is to strengthen the regulation and control of noise, considering it obvious. But not so simple as it seems because many of the activities that create noise, are also a source of profit. Take, for example, the airport and everything to do with his work. Thanks to our ongoing research policy, find out what level of noise can adversely affect health, allowing them to develop reasonable measures to reduce noise.

Robert Koch is credited with saying: “someday man will have for its existence as hard to deal with the noise, as he struggles now with cholera and the plague”. I think this moment has come, and I hope that we will win this fight. And when that happens, we quietly celebrate our victory.

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Asia Noise News

Noise nuisance from neighbours, Punggol, Singapore

Singapore: Over the past two years, one Housing Board block in Punggol has seen heavy market activity. Six households on the same floor moved out – all because of one woman.

Dubbed the “neighbour from hell”, she is accused of splashing oil at doors, playing loud music and stomping on the floor.

One neighbour even claimed she had left a bloody pig’s ear on a shoe rack.

Multiple police reports were made. Feeling helpless when told by the authorities that what she did was not an arrestable offence, six families to date have sold their flats, with the latest one moving out last November.

New families who moved in said they have also made reports to the authorities.

The second resident in the Punggol Central HDB block to move out due to the neighbour did so with her husband and two-year-old daughter in February last year, five years after moving into the Build-To-Order block, which has a mix of two-, three-and four-room flats.

She told The Sunday Times that it was “so stressful” that she even appealed to HDB to let her sell her flat before completing the five-year minimum occupation period. Her appeal was rejected.

“I simply couldn’t take it anymore. I would go home after work to find some kind of liquid splashed on my door. One day it was used cooking oil, another day it was porridge. The worst was when I saw a pig’s ear on my shoe rack,” she said.

“It was my first flat and I felt very suay (unlucky). I sold my flat to another family. I felt sorry for them but everyone wants to escape.”

The neighbour in question is a 51-year-old housewife.

In 2013, the divorcee and her son, who is waiting to enter university, moved into their two-room flat.

Interviews with her former and current neighbours indicate that the trouble began the year after.

One neighbour showed a folder of at least 17 police reports filed, as well as complaints to HDB.

A police spokesman said: “As the reports were for non-arrestable offences such as intentional harassment, noise pollution and mischief, the housewife’s neighbours were advised to lodge a magistrate’s complaint. All involved parties were also advised to keep the peace.”

A magistrate’s complaint is filed when one wishes to start a private prosecution against someone he believes has committed a criminal offence against him. The neighbour who filed the complaint, after an earlier attempt at mediation failed, lives in the flat above the woman.

He claims she intimidated him with “a large stone” when she confronted him about noise from his flat last month.

The accusations were disputed by the housewife who said he had provoked her by dropping metal balls on his floor which she could hear.

“So, I took a pebble and went up to bounce it outside his unit’s corridor as I was angry. It disturbed my sleep and it was not the first time. I also called the police,” she said.

Speaking from her home for three hours on Thursday, the housewife was calm and articulate as she addressed her neighbours’ accusations.

“If ex-owners said they sold their flats because of me, I tell you, I am not that great. I, one person, cannot do all this. I have footage of their nuisance acts and they are no bunch of sweet peas,” she said and accused her neighbours of ganging up against her.

One ex-neighbour who wanted to be known only as Lee, said the neighbours had held a few meetings as they experienced the same issues with the housewife.

noisy neighbour Punggol Singapore
noisy neighbour Punggol Singapore

The disputes started with the previous owner of the unit facing hers, recalled the housewife.

She said the couple threw cigarette ashes into the gap between her wooden door and grille gate. So she installed three closed-circuit television cameras outside her flat.

In the past five years, the woman added, she has filed multiple complaints with different agencies, including the National Environment Agency, about her neighbours.

When told that her neighbours had complained of loud music and banging doors coming from her flat, the housewife said she has to sleep with her radio on each day “to drown out the noise” from upstairs.

“My conscience is clear.”

Last year, the couple opposite the housewife sold their home to a 34-year-old single mother.

On her first day home, she found police at her door.

The administrative assistant who declined to be named said: “She had called the police to complain that my cousin was making noise and smoking at the corridor.

“A month later, she poured cooking oil outside my flat on three occasions.” — The Straits Times/Asia News Network

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Asia Noise News

Guangzhou and Beijing Rank as Two Loudest Cities in the World

China is home to two of the loudest cities in the world – Guangzhou and Beijing

According to a recent article in The Guardian, Guangzhou, China, ranked as having the worst levels of noise pollution in the world, followed by Cairo, Paris, Beijing and Delhi.

New study Global Acoustic Insulation shows demand for acoustic insulation in China totalling $1.5 billion in 2018, making it the second largest national market in the world in value terms behind the US.

Through 2023, demand for acoustic insulation in the Asia/Pacific region is expected to grow 6.3% per annum to $4.3 billion, representing 46% of value growth worldwide. Going forward, gains will be boosted by rising standards of living, supporting increased access to air conditioning, associated HVAC equipment output, and higher quality building stocks the rapid expansion of nonresidential building construction in China
growth in industrial equipment and appliance production government efforts in some countries to improve noise pollution and worker safety regulation.

When we include all regions, Freedonia forecasts demand growth at 4.9% per year to reach $11.4 billion in 2023. Despite the popularity of fibreglass in North America and of mineral wool in Eastern Europe, foamed plastic is projected to account for the majority of value gains globally through 2023. Foamed plastic is the most used insulation material in the Asia/Pacific region which will strengthen the material’s leading position.

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Asia Noise News

User meeting SoundPLAN, 23 February 2016 Bangkok

User meeting SoundPLAN, 23 February 2016 Bangkok

The SoundPLAN Asia usermeeting will be held in Bangkok, Thailand on 23 February 2016 at the SC Park hotel.

Jochen Schaal is owner / director of SoundPLAN Germany and will tell more about:

– New features SoundPLAN version 7.4
– Industry Industry module new features, Source emission from measured levels, Directivity, Industrial building
– Aircraft Aircraft Noise (radar + helicopter).
– Building Building Acoustics Outside
– Graphics Graphics workshop – new features – questions
– AttributeExplorer, Attribute Explorer and its use
– Total noise VDI 3722-2 total noise assessment
– Loudspeaker Complex loudspeaker setups (d&b audiotechnik)

There will also be a guest speaker from ERTC (Environmental Research and Training Center) who is experienced in noise mapping, especially for the Suvarnabhumi airport extention.

RSVP before 15 February, participation is free for all SoundPLAN users and includes breaks and lunch.

Please send your confirmation to info@soundplan.asia or use our Contact form

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Asia Noise News

China Exclusive: Festive noise annoys neighbors

SHIJIAZHUANG, Dec. 9 (Xinhua) — Wu Xianzhou had to eventually call the police because firecrackers that were being set off by his neighbors kept him awake.

“I felt dizzy all day long. Firecrackers woke me at 6 a.m. At 9 p.m., when I tried to sleep, another round of firecrackers went off,” said Wu, who is in his 70s and lives in Xiangfuli Residential Community in the city of Tangshan in Hebei Province.

Noise pollution is a problem, especially at this time of the year. Setting off firecrackers is a Chinese tradition to celebrate weddings, opening of a new business or moving into a new home. Chinese people tend to arrange wedding ceremonies at the end of the year.

Although cities including Tangshan do not allow firecrackers to be set off in the city proper, enforcement is poor. Police usually turn a blind eye.

People realize the harm being caused to their health by the noise. They have complained about it, said You Jie, a police officer in the city’s Lubei District.

You said his police station in Wenhua Road has dealt with nearly 1,000 complaints about firecrackers this year. The police have issued fines in extreme cases.

Studies show that noise exceeding 85 decibels can cause hearing impairment and harm the heart. Long-term exposure to noise may lead to male infertility or miscarriage.

Apart from firecrackers, loud music in public squares is also a problem.

Last month, high school students from the No. 1 High School of Kailuan in Tangshan City protested about loud music being played in Fenghuangshan Park, a place where people dance.

They wore t-shirts saying “Dear grandpas and grandmas, uncles and aunts, would you please put your music down. We’re having lessons. Bless you. Thank you.”

Liu Sichen, one of the protesters, said although the dancing created a harmonious atmosphere, it was too loud. The noise made it difficult for the students to concentrate in class.

“The dance music drowned out our teacher’s voice,” he said.

In response, dancers decided to use smaller audio amplifiers so the music is not as loud.

To address noise pollution, authorities in Tangshan, Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi Province, and Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, are mulling the idea of a “noise map”, where different areas can have different noise limits.

“With the mapping, both complaints and enforcement regarding noise pollution will be better exerted based on regulations,” said police officer You.

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Asia Noise News

Hong Kong blind community calls for louder noise from electric cars to improve safety

Hong Kong blind community calls for louder noise from electric cars to improve safety

Hong Kong blind community calls for louder noise from electric cars to improve safety

The silent nature of electric cars may improve quality of life, but Hong Kong’s blind community has demanded the city’s e-vehicles emit a louder noise, claiming their quietness threatens the safety of the visually impaired, the Post has learned.

Joining forces with the World Blind Union’s global campaign against silent e-cars over safety risks, the Hong Kong Blind Union has raised calls for local authorities to introduce legislation to regulate the vehicles.

Concerns have been raised by the international blind community about their hazards as they give no audible warnings to road users. This risk is higher when silent cars proceed at low speeds such as in parking lots.

As some countries such as the US, the UK and Japan already have plans to regulate e-cars’ sound levels, the union hoped local officials would require the city’s e-cars to be equipped with an alert system so that not only the visually impaired but also the elderly and children could easily be alerted to their movements, particularly on quiet roads. As of the end of August this year, there were 6,167 electric vehicles in Hong Kong, up from fewer than 100 at the end of 2010.

The union’s president Chong Chan-yau told the Post his group wrote a letter to the government in March this year asking that it introduce legislation and conduct a public consultation with all stakeholders, especially the blind community. “But the reply to us did not indicate any active actions to be taken by the government,” he said.

“E-cars are now being regarded as a potential threat to visually-impaired pedestrians. The World Blind Union has raised this issue over the past two years at the UN and the European Union. This battle is being fought internationally,” he added.

A Transport and Housing Bureau spokesman told the Post it would follow up the issue as the UN Economic Commission for Europe world forum for the harmonisation of vehicle regulations was soon to publish a regulation requiring acoustic warning devices on hybrid and electric cars.

Once the regulation is published, the department will “liaise with the electric-vehicles’ manufacturers to follow up on installing acoustic warning systems on their vehicles” to further safeguard road users, the spokesman said.

He added the department had tried to persuade the relevant suppliers in Hong Kong to install the alert system to address blind people’s concerns, believing they would follow the new regulation.

He said some e-vehicles’ manufacturers such as Nissan Leaf and Renault Zoe had “already taken the initiative to introduce such systems into certain EV models in Hong Kong”.

But Chong said regulation of e-cars’ warning devices was necessary as the blind relied heavily on surrounding noise for orientation and discerning between vehicular and pedestrian roads.

He added that while many manufacturers agreed to install a warning system in their e-cars, some would like to give drivers an option to turn off the sound. Chong cited views he gathered at a World Blind Union conference in Orlando, Florida, in August.

“This is unacceptable to us. For the drivers, it doesn’t affect them because the sound is emitted outside the car, not inside. We will insist that the system should always be turned on,” he said.

Locky Law, Tesla owner representative at Charged Hong Kong, said e-car owners would not oppose installing a beeper if carmakers sought to use the device to address blind people’s concerns.

However, he expressed worries over noise emission levels as the city’s streets were already clattering with different types of sounds. Law said adding beepers to e-cars and requiring them to emit a sound whenever they moved would “certainly make the roads very noisy”.

“How loud should the beeper be then?” he asked. “With so many sounds on the roads, will that be even more confusing and dangerous for the blind?”

Law said the best approach was to conduct joint tests on Hong Kong streets with participation from representatives from blind groups as well as the government, academic experts and automakers to determine what noise standards would be suitable locally.

A spokesman for carmaker Honest Motors, which produces the Nissan Leaf, said the company’s e-cars had been equipped with beepers since 2011 in compliance with US regulation.

“The sound is loud enough to provide a warning to road users and quiet enough to avoid being disturbing,” he said. “Since the noise is emitted from outside [the vehicle], it still enables a quiet environment inside.”

Source: https://www.biv.com

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Asia Noise News

Maps show noise impact of Heathrow runways

Maps show noise impact of Heathrow runways

PEACE and quiet in north-west Surrey could be drowned out forever if Heathrow Airport is allowed to develop into a four-runway hub, according to new research by an anti-expansion group.

The 2M Group, led by the Conservative-controlled London Borough of Wandsworth, is an all-party alliance of more than 20 local authorities concerned about the environmental impact of Heathrow expansion on their communities.

The group, of which Spelthorne Borough Council used to be a member until switching allegiance and backing the airport, has produced noise contour maps showing areas that could be affected by aircraft from a four-runway Heathrow.

It is already feared that tens of thousands of residents in Spelthorne could be forced to move from their homes to make way for the expansion.

The maps are colour-coded to show which areas would be most adversely affected by noise – with the towns and villages in darker shading bearing the greatest brunt.

According to the maps, there would be an increase in noise for Staines, Egham, Virginia Water and Thorpe, as well as what was left of Stanwell and Ashford, plus parts of Elmbridge.

Heathrow Association for the Control of Aircraft Noise (HACAN) chairman, John Stewart, described youtubemp3now.com the impact of two additional runways as “devastating”.

He said: “The opposition from 2M and residents would be so great that it probably makes the whole project politically impossible.”

The 2M Group has consistently warned that Heathrow will not stop expanding if granted a third landing strip.

A spokesman for the airport said: “We are currently examining a number of options, all of which result in significantly less noise for local residents than the 2M Group’s scaremongering.

“We know aircraft noise can disturb people living under the flight path, which is why we encourage airlines to fly only their quietest aircraft at Heathrow through higher charges for noisier aircraft.”

The airport’s main European rivals have four or more runways and Heathrow will need to match their capacity to directly compete.

Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris already has four runways. Frankfurt and Barajas (Madrid) also have four, while Schiphol (Amsterdam) has six.

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