News update
  • JS committee demands quick resolution for workers who failed to go to Malaysia     |     
  • Farroque questions govt’s ties with India over failure to resolve water issue     |     
  • N’ganj terrorist hideout raid: 3 crude bombs recovered but no arrests     |     
  • A stampede at a religious event in India has killed at least 105 people     |     
  • “Around 700 tourists confined in Sajek as roads submerged”     |     

Dhaka’s air continues to be moderate

GreenWatch Desk Air 2024-07-01, 10:23am

download-fd456406745d816a45cae554c788e7541719807989.jpeg




Dhaka has ranked 13th on the list of cities worldwide with the worst air quality with an AQI score of 82 at 9am this morning (July 1, 2024).


Dhaka’s air this morning was classified as 'moderate' and this trend continued for the past few days under the influence of the monsoon, according to the air quality index.

When the AQI value for particle pollution is between 50 and 100, air quality is considered ‘moderate’, between 101 and 150, air quality is considered ‘unhealthy for sensitive groups’, between 150 and 200 is ‘unhealthy’, between 201 and 300 is said to be 'very unhealthy', while a reading of 301+ is considered 'hazardous', posing serious health risks to residents.

Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Kinshasa, Uganda’s Kampala and Indonesia’s Jakarta occupied the first, second and third spots on the list, with AQI scores of 194, 174 and 162, respectively.

The AQI, an index for reporting daily air quality, informs people how clean or polluted the air of a certain city is and what associated health effects might be a concern for them.

The AQI in Bangladesh is based on five pollutants: particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5), NO2, CO, SO2, and ozone.

Dhaka has long been grappling with air pollution issues. Its air quality usually turns unhealthy in winter and improves during the monsoon.

As per World Health Organization (WHO), air pollution kills an estimated seven million people worldwide every year, mainly due to increased mortality from stroke, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung cancer, and acute respiratory infections, reports UNB.