Tālcher — Seasonal Pollution Patterns
Month-by-month air quality patterns for Tālcher across 6 years of CPCB data. Based on CPCB station data, 2016–present.
Odisha · Live Tālcher AQI →
At a glance
Based on 6 years of CPCB monitoring across 1 stations, Tālcher averages AQI 132 annually, with a pronounced seasonal pattern classified as monsoon-cleansed. The worst month is December at AQI 200 (Moderate) and the cleanest is September at AQI 65 (Satisfactory) — a 135-point swing between them. Severe days (AQI > 400) make up 0.2% of the record while Good-or-Satisfactory days account for 43.1%.
The four seasons
Indian meteorological seasons: Winter (Dec–Feb), Summer (Mar–May), Monsoon (Jun–Sep), Post-monsoon (Oct–Nov).
Winter
AQI 196Summer
AQI 118Monsoon
AQI 80Post-monsoon
AQI 136Climograph — monthly averages and Poor+ days
Bars show the long-run AQI average per month. The overlay line counts days in Poor, Very Poor or Severe bands.
Year × month heatmap
One cell per year-month combination.
Each cell = monthly average AQI for that year-month combination. Row averages on the right, column averages at the bottom.
| Year | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | — | 309 | 256 | 127 | 111 | 132 | 116 | 108 | — | 114 | 277 | 267 | 189 |
| 2019 | 272 | 273 | 193 | 138 | 139 | 103 | 95 | 94 | 61 | 64 | 204 | 239 | 175 |
| 2020 | 287 | 177 | 111 | 126 | 93 | 62 | 64 | 101 | 94 | 92 | 125 | 142 | 124 |
| 2021 | 150 | 139 | 110 | 106 | 89 | 104 | 86 | 72 | 42 | 85 | 103 | 120 | 102 |
| 2022 | 140 | 115 | 118 | 77 | 69 | 63 | 55 | 70 | 62 | 90 | 154 | 193 | 105 |
| 2023 | 149 | 166 | 122 | 124 | 73 | 77 | 66 | 57 | 56 | 74 | 191 | 266 | 127 |
| Avg | 198 | 190 | 145 | 113 | 96 | 92 | 82 | 80 | 65 | 88 | 174 | 200 | — |
Winter in Tālcher
Winter (Dec–Jan–Feb) in Tālcher averages AQI 196 across 452 measured days — Moderate on the NAQI scale. 15% of those days fall in Very Poor or Severe; 9.3% are Good or Satisfactory. Year-on-year, winter worsened by 31.4% in the most recent comparison. Winter is the defining season for Tālcher's air quality. Shallow temperature inversions trap local vehicle, industrial and biomass emissions near ground level, while regional transport patterns bring in dust and biomass smoke from upwind regions. Cool, stagnant mornings compound the problem; visibility falls, respiratory complaints spike, and short-term pollution peaks of AQI 400+ are routine. Sensitive groups — children, elderly, asthma and cardiac patients — should treat the full Dec–Jan–Feb window as a mandatory mask-and-purifier period.
Diwali, stubble burning and the monsoon
Three India-specific signatures that shape the seasonal curve.
Diwali week impact
The 7-day window around Diwali averages AQI 165 (Moderate), versus 86 (Satisfactory) for the rest of October. 36 sampled days across the CPCB record.
Stubble-burning window (Oct 15 – Nov 15)
In-window severe-day share 1.2% vs 0.1% outside the window. The difference is a direct signal of upwind crop-residue transport.
Monsoon cleansing (Jul 15 – Sep 15)
Core monsoon window averages AQI 76 (Satisfactory), compared with an annual mean of 132.
Summer
Summer (Mar–Apr–May) in Tālcher averages AQI 118 across 405 measured days — Moderate on the NAQI scale. 2% of those days fall in Very Poor or Severe; 46.9% are Good or Satisfactory. Year-on-year, summer worsened by 30.1% in the most recent comparison. Summer air in Tālcher is shaped by a very different mix of forces. Rising temperatures drive deeper vertical mixing which dilutes local emissions, but pre-monsoon dust storms, wildfires and heat-accelerated ozone formation can all push AQI higher on individual days. Tālcher's summer mean of 118 is the lighter side of the year for outdoor activity, though hot afternoons can still irritate sensitive airways.
Monsoon
Monsoon (Jun–Jul–Aug–Sep) in Tālcher averages AQI 80 across 492 measured days — Satisfactory on the NAQI scale. 0% of those days fall in Very Poor or Severe; 72.6% are Good or Satisfactory. Year-on-year, monsoon improved by 1.1% in the most recent comparison. The Jul 15 – Sep 15 core monsoon window averages AQI 76, a 42.4% improvement on the annual mean of 132. Rain scrubs particulates out by wet deposition, and the deeper monsoon boundary layer disperses what remains vertically. Short-lived rebounds can happen between spells of rain, but the overall pattern is strongly favourable for outdoor activity. For anyone with asthma or heart conditions, monsoon is the easy-breathing stretch of the year in Tālcher.
Post-monsoon
Post-monsoon (Oct–Nov) in Tālcher averages AQI 136 across 295 measured days — Moderate on the NAQI scale. 6.4% of those days fall in Very Poor or Severe; 40.3% are Good or Satisfactory. Year-on-year, post-monsoon worsened by 14.1% in the most recent comparison. Diwali and the three days either side of it average AQI 165 — 1.9× the normal October baseline of AQI 86 for Tālcher, a spike of 78 points. Post-monsoon in Tālcher is the handoff from clean monsoon air to the winter peak, and the transition is rarely gentle.
Month-by-month trajectories
How each month has moved across the 6-year CPCB record.
First year vs latest year
Annual and per-season comparison.
Across the 6-year CPCB record Tālcher is improving overall — AQI moved from 190 in 2018 to 127 in 2023, a -33.2% change. No month shows a material worsening of 10% or more. Months that improved most: Jan (-45.2%), Feb (-46.3%), Mar (-52.3%), May (-34.2%). Because Tālcher's seasonal shape is monsoon-cleansed, policy action that targets the December peak buys disproportionate relief — most city-wide annual averages are dragged upwards by the worst two or three months.
Daily calendar heatmap
Every measured day for the last 3 years. Expand for the full 6-year archive.
Month-by-month deep dive
Tap any month to expand.
Jan2019–2023Latest AQI 149-45%
Jan in Tālcher averages AQI 149 (Moderate) in the most recent year, having moved from 272 in 2019. Direction: improving (-45.2%).
Feb2018–2023Latest AQI 166-46%
Feb in Tālcher averages AQI 166 (Moderate) in the most recent year, having moved from 309 in 2018. Direction: improving (-46.3%).
Mar2018–2023Latest AQI 122-52%
Mar in Tālcher averages AQI 122 (Moderate) in the most recent year, having moved from 256 in 2018. Direction: improving (-52.3%).
Apr2018–2023Latest AQI 124-2%
Apr in Tālcher averages AQI 124 (Moderate) in the most recent year, having moved from 127 in 2018. Direction: stable (-2.4%).
May2018–2023Latest AQI 73-34%
May in Tālcher averages AQI 73 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 111 in 2018. Direction: improving (-34.2%).
Jun2018–2023Latest AQI 77-42%
Jun in Tālcher averages AQI 77 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 132 in 2018. Direction: improving (-41.7%).
Jul2018–2023Latest AQI 66-43%
Jul in Tālcher averages AQI 66 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 116 in 2018. Direction: improving (-43.1%).
Aug2018–2023Latest AQI 57-47%
Aug in Tālcher averages AQI 57 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 108 in 2018. Direction: improving (-47.2%).
Sep2019–2023Latest AQI 56-8%
Sep in Tālcher averages AQI 56 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 61 in 2019. Direction: stable (-8.2%).
Oct2018–2023Latest AQI 74-35%
Oct in Tālcher averages AQI 74 (Satisfactory) in the most recent year, having moved from 114 in 2018. Direction: improving (-35.1%).
Nov2018–2023Latest AQI 191-31%
Nov in Tālcher averages AQI 191 (Moderate) in the most recent year, having moved from 277 in 2018. Direction: improving (-31.0%).
Dec2018–2023Latest AQI 266-0%
Dec in Tālcher averages AQI 266 (Poor) in the most recent year, having moved from 267 in 2018. Direction: stable (-0.4%).
Cities with similar (and opposite) seasonal profiles
Ranked by cosine similarity of 12-month AQI signatures across monitored Indian cities.
Similar seasonal profile
Cities whose 12-month AQI signature most closely matches Tālcher.
Opposite seasonal profile
Cities whose seasonal signature least resembles Tālcher.
What to do with this information
If you are choosing when to visit Tālcher or plan outdoor events — marathons, weddings, school sports, outdoor festivals — the CPCB record says September and the two adjacent months are the lowest-risk window. Daily variability still matters; check the live AQI page before committing on any specific date. Sensitive groups should treat December in Tālcher as an indoor-air-priority month: close windows on high-AQI evenings, run a purifier with a HEPA filter rated for your room size, and reserve outdoor exercise for clear-weather mornings. On days above AQI 300, even healthy adults benefit from well-fitted N95 or KN95 masks for outdoor commutes.
Frequently asked questions
Which is the most polluted month in Tālcher?
December is the most polluted month in Tālcher on average, with a long-run AQI of 200 — firmly in the Moderate band. This is drawn from 1 CPCB monitoring stations across 6 years of daily readings. Through December, residents should expect elevated PM2.5 and PM10, reduced visibility on cooler mornings, and strong recommendations from doctors to limit outdoor exertion, wear well-fitted N95 masks, and run indoor purifiers through evening and overnight hours when pollutant accumulation typically peaks.
What is the cleanest month to visit Tālcher?
September is the cleanest month of the year in Tālcher, averaging AQI 65 in the Satisfactory band. The months immediately before and after also tend to sit well below the annual mean of 132, so a visit window centred on September is the safest choice for outdoor sightseeing, marathons, school trips and wedding events. Mornings are usually the crispest time to head out; pollution tends to creep up slightly during the evening commute even in the cleanest months. Always cross-check the day-of live AQI before any high-exertion outdoor plan.
Why does Tālcher's air spike in December?
Tālcher shows a clear monsoon-cleansed signature — rain and deeper atmospheric mixing drop AQI to a seasonal trough, and everything else relative to that trough looks elevated. The specific December spike combines pre-monsoon dust, post-rain rebounds and the arrival of cool-season trapping effects.
How bad is Diwali air quality in Tālcher?
Across the CPCB record, the week around Diwali in Tālcher averages AQI 165 — 1.9× the normal October baseline of AQI 86, a spike of 78 AQI points. Firework particulates combine with a cooler, more stagnant late-October atmosphere to produce some of the worst air-quality days of the entire year. Sensitive groups should treat Diwali eve and the two days after as peak-alert days: stay indoors, close windows by evening, run purifiers on high, and reserve any outdoor celebrations for daytime hours when mixing is strongest.
Does the monsoon actually clean Tālcher's air?
Yes — meaningfully. Tālcher's core monsoon window (Jul 15 – Sep 15) averages AQI 76, a 42.4% improvement on the annual mean of 132. Rain removes airborne particulates by wet deposition, and the deeper monsoon boundary layer disperses what remains vertically. Across 492 measured monsoon days we see 72.6% in the Good-or-Satisfactory band.
Is Tālcher's worst season getting worse or better year-on-year?
Between 2018 and 2023, Tālcher's annual average AQI moved from 190 to 127 — a change of -33.2%. In the most recent year-on-year comparison, the winter season specifically worsened by 31.4%. The long-run direction is improving — NCAP policy pressure, cleaner fuels and tighter vehicle standards are showing up.
Which months are safest to visit Tālcher?
September is the single best month at AQI 65. Based on the 12-month averages, the three cleanest months in Tālcher are September (AQI 65), August (AQI 80), July (AQI 82). These are the safest choices for outdoor itineraries, long walks, open-air concerts and day-trips. Sensitive groups can treat these months as near-normal activity windows but should still check live AQI for the specific date. Avoid planning outdoor-heavy trips in December, when the baseline jumps into Moderate territory.
How does Tālcher's seasonal pattern compare to other Indian cities?
Tālcher is classified as monsoon-cleansed. Based on a 12-month cosine-similarity index computed across all monitored Indian cities, the city whose seasonal signature most closely resembles Tālcher's is Saharsa (Bihar), with its own worst month in January. Cities with similar signatures often respond to similar policy levers — if a neighbouring peer has demonstrated improvements through specific interventions (construction-dust controls, bus electrification, brick-kiln regulation), they are likely candidates for Tālcher too. The peer-city panel on this page lists the closest four additional matches.