Environment

Belgrade to purchase air purifiers for schools

Belgrade air purifiers schools children

Photo: iStock

Published

August 25, 2023

Country

Comments

comments icon

1

Share

Published:

August 25, 2023

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

1

Share

The city authorities in Belgrade will purchase air purifiers for their youngest residents in order to improve the quality of the air they breathe.

The Secretariat for Environmental Protection of the City of Belgrade has announced a tender for the procurement of 11,500 air purifiers.

For years now air pollution has been a major problem for Western Balkan countries. So far, air purifiers for the youngest were bought by Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia, in 2019, and by Sarajevo, the capital of BiH, a year later. Despite the problems with air quality, Belgrade has not yet done so.

According to a recent research, air pollution causes over 1,200 premature deaths per year in people under the age of 18 across 32 European countries and significantly increases the risk of disease later in life.

The procurement is based on Belgrade’s action plan adopted in 2021

The Belgrade city authorities have said that procurement will be carried out in line with an action plan for the reduction of air pollution, adopted in 2021.

In June 2021, the Belgrade City Assembly adopted the Air Quality Plan with the Action Plan for the implementation of measures to reduce air pollution for the period 2021-2031.

One of the measures in the Action Plan is to assess the possibility of installing air purification systems in urban areas.

By installing air purifiers in preschool and school facilities, air quality would be significantly improved, with a positive impact on the health of the youngest population, according to the public call.

Bids are to be submitted by September 25, while the deadline for the delivery and installation of the air purifiers is December 20, 2023.

When it comes to technical characteristics, the purifiers are intended for rooms of at least 60 square meters, and they need to have a clean air delivery rate (CADR) of at least 500 cubic meters per hour and use a filter of at least H13 HEPA with activated carbon.

The purifiers should also be equipped with PM sensors, a UVC sterilizer, a photocatalytic filter, and an ionizer, with a maximum input power of 50 W.

Comments (1)
Mikael / September 4, 2023

Where can we find the tender documents regarding this procurement?

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

birds biodiversity

Greece suspends three wind projects over biodiversity concerns

11 December 2024 - Environmentalists urge suspension of all wind projects in areas affected by the 2023 wildfires to preserve sensitive bird species.

Bulgarian citizens demand referendum on wind farm construction on agricultural land

Bulgarian citizens demand referendum on wind farms on agricultural land

09 December 2024 - Citizens from four Bulgarian districts protested in Varna, calling for a referendum on constructing solar and wind farms on agricultural land

serbia green budget projects 2025 railway

Serbia introduces Green Budget, earmarks EUR 1 billion for projects

06 December 2024 - The 2025 Budget Law includes the first Green Budget annex, listing 64 green projects to be implemented next year

mars sa drine, lawsuit, environmental impact assessment, jadar, rio tinto

Citizens asked to join complaint against Serbia’s EIA requirements for lithium project Jadar

05 December 2024 - Activist group Marš sa Drine called on citizens to join its complaint against Serbia's requirements for the environmental study for Rio Tinto's lithium project Jadar