Hāveri — AQI Trends
Year-over-year AQI trajectory for Hāveri (2022–2024). Based on CPCB station data, 2016–present.
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Hāveri — annual AQI 2022–2024
Year × month heatmap
Worst single days on record
- 2023-11-17Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)262
- 2023-11-16Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)237
- 2024-11-13Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)234
- 2023-11-18Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)234
- 2022-12-08Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)229
- 2022-11-30Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)227
- 2023-12-23Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)226
- 2023-12-22Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)225
- 2023-12-21Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)222
- 2023-11-15Ashwini Nagar (KSPCB)212
What the numbers say
Overview
Hāveri's AQI moved from 67 in 2022 to 66 in 2024 — a fall of 1.5% over 2 years. The long-run trend is roughly stable, with a regression slope of -0.5 AQI points per year.
The data story
The worst recorded year in Hāveri was 2023 at AQI 71, while the best was 2024 at AQI 66. The city has posted 1.4% of all measured days above AQI 200 (the Poor threshold), and its worst recorded single day hit 262 on 17 Nov 2023.
Why this pattern
Hāveri's trend has been stable — neither clearly worsening nor clearly improving. That stability often masks underlying growth in emissions being offset by cleaner vehicle technology or weather variability. The NCAP era from 2019 onward is the key policy backdrop; stability here means targets have not yet translated into measurable ground-level change.
What to do with this
For planners and residents, the trend matters as much as today's number. A worsening city needs aggressive source control and personal protection investments like indoor purifiers. An improving city rewards continued policy pressure but still requires caution during peak months. Use the live AQI page for day-to-day decisions and this chart for multi-year context. Year-over-year change of more than 10% in either direction is typically real signal, not noise.