Today's full report
Download the daily reportPDF, 0.6 MBNarrated in Hindi. Runs 114 seconds.
The run, with the weather taken out
Each point is that day's PM10 level against the same period last year, after the model removes the effect of weather. The shaded band is the uncertainty around each day. Above the line means Delhi's air was genuinely worse, and not merely unluckier with the wind. The run begins 30 May 2026.
What today's report says
Against the world standard
Even after removing the weather's help, Delhi's fine-particle level (PM2.5) is 43 micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m³) — 2.9× the WHO safe limit of 15. The worst weather-corrected hotspot is Wazirpur at 49 µg/m³ — 3.3× the WHO limit.
How widespread
After weather correction, 31 of 31 comparable stations are worse than last year — the typical station is 21 AQI points higher. This is a city-wide rise, not a few bad spots.
Honesty box
On days it has never seen, the weather-correction model explains about 37% of the variation — so we treat its outputs as estimates, not exact points. 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; weather model weak — observed facts only · SO2: weather model too weak to separate weather from policy — observed facts only · CO: weather model too weak to separate weather from policy — 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: 45 of 45 stations above the WHO daily limit as observed; even after weather correction, 45 of 45 remain above it. PM10: 45 of 45 stations above the WHO daily limit as observed; even after weather correction, 45 of 45 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.