Air quality in Kolkata

Air quality index (AQI) and PM2.5 air pollution in Kolkata

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Weather

What is the current weather in Kolkata?

Weather icon
WeatherMist
Temperature86°F
Humidity58%
Wind8.1 mp/h
Pressure29.6 Hg
Air pollution has cost an estimated9,500 deaths*in Kolkata in 2024Find out more*Air pollution also cost approximately $1,400,000,000 USD in Kolkata in 2024.

live aqi city ranking

Real-time India city ranking

#cityUS AQI
1 Hyderabad, Telangana

157

2 Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh

157

3 Bengaluru, Karnataka

154

4 Delhi, Delhi

152

5 New Delhi, Delhi

137

6 Jaipur, Rajasthan

102

7 Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh

97

8 Mumbai, Maharashtra

91

9 Jodhpur, Rajasthan

86

10 Indore, Madhya Pradesh

71

(local time)

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live Kolkata aqi ranking

Real-time Kolkata air quality ranking

#stationUS AQI
1 US Consulate in Kolkata

153

(local time)

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US AQI

153

live AQI index
Unhealthy

Human face indicating AQI level

Overview

What is the current air quality in Kolkata?

Air pollution levelAir quality indexMain pollutant
Unhealthy 153 US AQIPM2.5
PollutantsConcentration
PM2.5
59µg/m³
!

PM2.5

x11.8

PM2.5 concentration in Kolkata is currently 11.8 times the WHO annual air quality guideline value

Health Recommendations

What is the current air quality in Kolkata?

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Forecast

Kolkata air quality index (AQI) forecast

DayPollution levelWeatherTemperatureWind
Tuesday, Apr 16

Unhealthy 154 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
104° 82.4°
Wind rotating 197 degree 13.4 mp/h
Wednesday, Apr 17

Unhealthy 155 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
109.4° 82.4°
Wind rotating 204 degree 13.4 mp/h
Thursday, Apr 18

Unhealthy 152 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
107.6° 80.6°
Wind rotating 203 degree 11.2 mp/h
Today

Unhealthy 153 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
107.6° 80.6°
Wind rotating 203 degree 11.2 mp/h
Saturday, Apr 20

Moderate 100 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
111.2° 82.4°
Wind rotating 196 degree 15.7 mp/h
Sunday, Apr 21

Moderate 95 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
114.8° 80.6°
Wind rotating 198 degree 20.1 mp/h
Monday, Apr 22

Unhealthy for sensitive groups 105 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
113° 80.6°
Wind rotating 182 degree 15.7 mp/h
Tuesday, Apr 23

Unhealthy for sensitive groups 112 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
113° 82.4°
Wind rotating 181 degree 15.7 mp/h
Wednesday, Apr 24

Unhealthy for sensitive groups 101 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
109.4° 84.2°
Wind rotating 205 degree 20.1 mp/h
Thursday, Apr 25

Moderate 99 AQI US

Human face indicating AQI level
Weather icon
111.2° 82.4°
Wind rotating 183 degree 17.9 mp/h

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AIR QUALITY ANALYSIS AND STATISTICS FOR Kolkata

How polluted is the city of Kolkata?

Kolkata, sometimes known as the city of joy, is located approximately 80km away from the border to Bangladesh, and is the capital city of the Indian state of Bengal. Famous for its long history of culture, commerce as well as literary and artistic thought, it attracts many visitors, both internationally and locally, as well as having a rapidly growing and somewhat large population of inhabitants, some four and a half million as recorded in 2011, and with 14.85 million as of 2020, showing massive growth not only economically but in regards to the amount of people living within the megacity limits.

Kolkata was shown to have a PM2.5 reading of 59.8 as recorded in 2019, as a yearly average. This puts it directly into the ‘unhealthy’ bracket rating, which requires a PM2.5 reading of anywhere between 55.5 to 150.4 μg/m³ to be classified as such. This reading places it in the position of 61st most polluted city worldwide in 2019, and coming in at 28th place out of all cities ranked in India. This shows that Kolkata is indeed very polluted, and whilst it may not suffer from the same extreme levels of pollution that other cities do, it certainly has many months that see very hazardous levels of pollution.

When is pollution at its worst in Kolkata?

Observing the data recorded over 2019, the one month that stood out above all others was January, which came in with a PM2.5 reading of 176.1 μg/m³, putting it squarely into the ‘very unhealthy’ bracket, one which requires a reading of any PM2.5 number between 150.5 μg/m³ and 250.4 μg/m³ to be given such a title.

PM2.5 (and its larger cousin, PM10) refers to fine particulate matter that is 2.5 or less micrometers in diameter, or 10 if referring to PM10, which is somewhat less deadly due to its larger size but still has the ability to cause many issues when inhaled over long periods of time.

With a rating of 176.1 μg/m³ in January, the whole population would be at a very large risk of adverse health effects, with young children, the elderly and those with predisposition to being sick at highest risk. To give some comparison, the cleanest month recorded in Kolkata was 19.7 μg/m³, nearly 9 times lower than the highest months reading. The disparity is somewhat alarming, with some serious causes being behind this large spike of pollution.

What are the main causes of pollution in Kolkata?

The main causes of pollution in Kolkata would be similar to many other states and cities in India, although with differences in what times of the year see their worst spikes in smoke and haze, due to several different factors. Vehicles always play a large role in the ambient year-round pollution levels, with highly dense and populated cities often playing host to an equal, if not a greater number of vehicles. Cars and motorbikes as well as lorries and trucks would all be emitting vast quantities of smoke, haze and pollution into the air, with ones running off of fossil fuels such as diesel putting out larger amounts of pollution.

Pollutants arising from the vehicular industry would include black carbon and volatile organic compounds (VOC’s), both of which are released from the incomplete combustion of fossil fuels such as diesel.

They are also produced from practices such as slash and burn farming, setting organic waste and refuse on fire, as well as the use of coal to provide power to the numerous factories and industrial plants located around Kolkata. The main pollutant released from the vehicular industry (as well as from all combustion sources) would be nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which is found in high concentration around any area worldwide that sees high volumes of traffic, and indeed Kolkata would be no exception, with levels of nitrogen dioxide constantly being a looming threat in its rise, due to the population explosion and therefore rise in personal vehicles.

What is Kolkata doing about its pollution levels?

Kolkata is implementing a number of incentives over the last few years out of growing concern for its pollution levels. A large amount of resources have been poured into the public transport sector, which would go a long way to helping reduce the levels of ambient pollution, in particular the aforementioned nitrogen dioxide.

Noxious smokes and fumes released from diesel fuels would also be reduced, as with newer public transport infrastructure often means newer models of public buses, as well as trains that rely on alternative fuel sources, and as such they would be emitting far less smoke and haze, usually thick with PM2.5 and other toxic compounds such as carbon monoxide (CO), ozone (O3) and soot, which contains large amounts of the aforementioned black carbon.

Besides being highly dangerous to breathe in, black carbon also has grave consequences in terms of climate control, having a prominent effect on a city due to its ability to convert solar radiation directly into heat. Thus, with large initiatives in the public transport sector, would have marked differences in pollution level reduction, which is already being seen.

Are pollution levels in Kolkata getting better?

Whilst pollution levels in Kolkata still have a way to go in order to see the best health of its citizens, it is apparent that pollution levels have improved over the last few years, with a marked improvement in levels of PM2.5 recorded in 2019 as opposed to the few years prior to that. In 2017, the yearly average of PM2.5 was 76.7 μg/m³, still in the unhealthy rating bracket but considerably higher in number than more recent times.

2018 came in with an even worse reading of 85.4 μg/m³, before finally coming to the improved reading of 2019 at 59.8 μg/m³, representing a drop of 25 μg/m³ of particulate matter in the course of a year.

Whilst Kolkata still has plenty of room for improvement, with the excessive numbers of pollution recorded in January skewing the results massively, its 2019 rating was not too far from being moved down a bracket out of the unhealthy rating and down into the ‘unhealthy for sensitive groups’ bracket. Whilst this is still a very long way from the WHO’s target rating of 0 to 10 μg/m³, it would represent a further change in the right direction.

Kolkata air quality data attribution

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