Balasore — Pollution Health Impact
424 days of CPCB data (2023–2024), translated through WHO 2021, Berkeley Earth and EPIC AQLI methods. Based on CPCB station data, 2016–present.
Odisha · Live Balasore AQI →
Living in Balasore is the population-level health-equivalent of smoking 3.2 cigarettes a day — roughly 1,171 cigarettes a year. On average, that chronic exposure shortens life expectancy by about 6.4 years per resident.
Cigarette-equivalence (Berkeley Earth 2015) and life-years lost (EPIC AQLI) are peer-reviewed communication heuristics, not clinical diagnoses. Full sources linked on the methodology page.
Headline impact numbers
Cigarettes/day by year
Annual average cigarette-equivalent.
Clean-air days (NAQI ≤ 50) by year
Days when NAQI stayed in the “Good” band.
Which WHO tier did Balasore meet?
24-hour PM2.5 compliance vs WHO 2021 targets.
- AQG1 days (0.2%)
- IT-46 days (1.4%)
- IT-321 days (5.0%)
- IT-296 days (22.6%)
- IT-1142 days (33.5%)
- Above IT-1158 days (37.3%)
WHO AQG (15) · IT-4 (25) · IT-3 (37.5) · IT-2 (50) · IT-1 (75) µg/m³ (24-hour PM2.5).
Life-years lost, by disease
Applying WHO's global attribution (68/14/14/4) to Balasore's 6.4 year estimate.
- Heart + stroke: 4.4y
- COPD: 0.9y
- Child ALRI: 0.9y
- Lung cancer: 0.3y
Worst and best months
Drill into full monthly pattern on the seasonal Balasore page →
High-risk days for vulnerable residents
- Days above WHO IT-3 (37.5 µg/m³) — pregnancy & infant risk elevated
- 396 (93.4%)
- Days above WHO IT-1 (75 µg/m³) — high risk for children under 5
- 158 (37.3%)
Source: WHO 2021 AQG interim-target risk framework; WHO 2024 ambient-air fact sheet identifies children under 5 and pregnant residents as the most vulnerable groups.
How Balasore compares to nearby cities
What the numbers say
Overview
Across 424 days of CPCB monitoring, the average adult in Balasore has breathed air with the health-equivalent of smoking 3.2 cigarettes a day — roughly 1,171 cigarettes every year (Berkeley Earth, 2015).
The data story
EPIC's AQLI research attributes about 6.4 life-years lost per person from this chronic exposure. The WHO Air Quality Guideline was met on just 1 of 424 days (0.2%); 158 days (37.3%) exceeded even the 75 µg/m³ Interim Target-1 threshold.
Why this pattern
The burden concentrates in January — when the average cigarette-equivalent climbs to 6.4/day — and eases in September (2.0/day). Globally, WHO attributes 68% of PM2.5 deaths to heart disease and stroke, with the remainder split across COPD, childhood ALRI, and lung cancer.
What to do with this
Cigarette-equivalence is a communication tool, not a medical verdict. Still, the direction is clear: time indoors with a HEPA unit and a good-fit mask outdoors during the 396 days (93.4%) above WHO IT-3 meaningfully lowers exposure — especially for pregnant residents and children under 5.