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Live AQI in Barreiras

Barreiras Air Quality Index (AQI)

Real-time AQI for Barreiras, Bahia, Brazil.

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About Barreiras

Barreiras serves as the strategic gateway to western Bahia, positioned within the expansive Cerrado biome on a gently undulating plateau. The urban character is defined by its role as a regional logistics hub, where the city's growth is inextricably linked to the surrounding agricultural landscape. The Rio Grande, a vital waterway, snakes through the terrain, providing essential moisture but also influencing local humidity levels. Geographically, the city is surrounded by vast plains of intensive soy and cotton production, creating a distinct urban-rural gradient where the city center transitions rapidly into industrial-scale farming. This position is critical for air quality; the flatness of the plateau allows winds to carry agricultural dust and combustion particles across the urban core. Because Barreiras is the center of the MATOPIBA agricultural frontier, the air quality is heavily influenced by the seasonal cycles of land preparation and harvest. The lack of significant topographic barriers means that pollutants, particularly particulate matter from soil disturbance and biomass burning, can linger or migrate depending on wind patterns. The city’s elevation and inland position distance it from the tempering effects of the Atlantic coast, leading to a drier atmosphere that facilitates the suspension of aerosols. Consequently, the urban environment breathes in sync with the rural hinterland, making the air quality a direct reflection of the agricultural calendar and the ecological health of the surrounding savannah, where land-use changes significantly impact local atmospheric composition and stability.

Air Quality Across Seasons

Barreiras experiences a tropical climate characterized by a stark dichotomy between the wet and dry seasons. During the rainy period, typically from October to April, frequent precipitation effectively scrubs the atmosphere, washing away particulate matter and keeping the air remarkably fresh. This is the optimal time for outdoor activities, as the moisture suppresses dust and inhibits biomass burning. However, the transition to the dry season, peaking between July and September, marks a period of heightened air quality concern. During these months, the Cerrado landscape becomes highly flammable, and the practice of agricultural burning, combined with the harvesting of soy and cotton, releases significant quantities of smoke and dust into the air. Meteorological conditions often include temperature inversions, where a layer of warm air traps pollutants near the surface, preventing vertical dispersion. This stagnation leads to peaks in fine particulate matter, which can penetrate deep into the lungs. Sensitive groups, including children, the elderly, and those with chronic respiratory conditions, should limit strenuous outdoor exertion during the late winter and early spring. The air often takes on a hazy quality, signaling high aerosol concentrations. By October, the arrival of the first heavy rains brings an immediate relief, clearing the skies and resetting the atmospheric cycle. To maintain respiratory health, residents are advised to monitor local visibility and avoid peak burning hours, ensuring that indoor environments remain filtered during the harshest dry spells of the calendar year.

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