SOUTHAMPTON’s pollution-battling Green City Charter is to be launched next month after it was ‘called-in’ in March.

The Green City Charter will be launched  on June 20, it can be revealed.

Details of the launch are yet to be revealed but it will coincide with National Clean Air Day.

The news comes after the original launch of the Green City Charter was cancelled after the Overview and Scrutiny Management Committee (OSMC) called the document back-in to be debated further. 

At the time,  Conservative member Peter Baillie, chairman of the OSMC, said he wanted the group to have another look at the document because he claimed “assurances” by Labour civic chiefs of “cross-party working groups” never came about.

The  cabinet was asked to delay the approval and launch of the Green City Charter to enable the fostering of a cross party consensus on the strategic objectives within the Charter.

But cabinet members hit back saying consultations were held and the charter will now go-ahead.

The charter aims to tackle all types of pollution in the city, going further than the compulsory nitrogen dioxide-tackling Clean Air Zone.

Cllr Steve Leggett, cabinet member for green city, said: “It is only by using collective action that we will improve air quality and tackle climate change. By launching the Green City Charter on National Clean Air Day on June20, we will bring together individuals, organisations and businesses to confirm our commitment to improving air quality and wellbeing in the city.”

He said the Green City Action Plan will be written by a working group until the end of the year. Becoming carbon neutral by 2030 is among the commitments.