Today's full report
Download the daily reportPDF, 0.6 MBWhat today's report says
Against the world standard
Even after removing the weather's help, Delhi's fine-particle level (PM2.5) is 44 micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m³), which is 2.9× the WHO safe limit of 15. The worst weather-corrected hotspot is Anand Vihar at 47 µg/m³, which is 3.1× the WHO limit.
How widespread
After weather correction, 30 of 30 comparable stations are worse than last year; the typical station is 22 AQI points higher. This is a city-wide rise, not a few bad spots.
Honesty box
The weather-correction model explains about 78% of hour-to-hour variation on its training data; out-of-sample skill is lower, so we treat outputs as estimates. The weather-corrected year-on-year change for fine particles is measured to within roughly ±1 percentage points of sampling error, before model uncertainty. Gas data carries documented unit-inconsistency (peer-reviewed international research, 2025); we lead on the reliable PM2.5/PM10. Percentages compare the same stations in both years; single-day observed spikes are never used as the headline.
PM2.5
Weather-corrected claims allowed (model skill adequate) · PM10: weather-corrected claims allowed (model skill adequate) · NO2: direction reliable (same stations + units both years); absolute levels carry the units caveat · NOx: not part of CPCB's AQI, and the weather model is weak here, so we report observed facts only · SO2: the weather model is too weak to separate weather from policy, so we report observed facts only · CO: the weather model is too weak to separate weather from policy, so we report observed facts only · Ozone: rising ozone chemically signals falling traffic NO2 (standing rule: excluded so it can never be spun as 'transport improved')
Above the world standard today
PM2.5: 44 of 44 stations above the WHO daily limit as observed; even after weather correction, 44 of 44 remain above it. PM10: 44 of 44 stations above the WHO daily limit as observed; even after weather correction, 44 of 44 remain above it. (Weather-model matched panel.)
A caution we publish daily
Gas data carries documented unit-inconsistency (peer-reviewed international research, 2025); we lead on the reliable PM2.5/PM10.