Live AQI in Kirari Suleman Nagar
Kirari Suleman Nagar Air Quality Index (AQI)
As of the latest reading (updated 6 hours ago), Kirari Suleman Nagar's air quality index is 170 on the NAQI scale, which falls in the Moderate category. The dominant pollutant in Kirari Suleman Nagar today is PM2.5 at 81 µg/m³. Everyone may begin to feel health effects; sensitive groups should avoid prolonged outdoor exertion.
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About Kirari Suleman Nagar
Kirari Suleman Nagar is a densely populated urban sub-city located in the northwest quadrant of Delhi, India, positioned at coordinates 28.7558°N, 77.0548°E within the expansive National Capital Region. Situated on the flat Indo-Gangetic Plain at an elevation of approximately 213 meters above sea level, this area lacks significant topographical relief that might otherwise facilitate pollutant dispersion. The city lies approximately 25 kilometers northwest of central Delhi's historic core, placing it within Delhi's rapidly expanding urban periphery where urban development meets agricultural hinterlands. This transitional urban-rural gradient proves particularly significant for air quality, as Kirari Suleman Nagar sits downwind from both Delhi's industrial clusters and the agricultural states of Punjab and Haryana to the northwest. The region's semi-arid climate, characterized by limited precipitation and sparse vegetation, exacerbates dust resuspension from unpaved roads and construction sites. No major rivers or significant water bodies moderate the local microclimate, though the city lies within the broader Yamuna River basin. Its position within Delhi's northwest industrial corridor—proximate to manufacturing zones and major transportation arteries like National Highway 44—ensures constant exposure to vehicular and industrial emissions. The city's dense, unplanned urban fabric with limited green spaces further traps pollutants, creating localized pollution hotspots that interact with regional air masses flowing across the Indo-Gangetic Plain.
Air Quality Across Seasons
Kirari Suleman Nagar experiences dramatic seasonal variations in air quality driven by meteorological conditions interacting with persistent pollution sources. During winter (October-January), the region faces its most severe pollution episodes as cold, stable air creates persistent temperature inversions that trap pollutants near the surface. These months coincide with agricultural stubble burning in neighboring states, whose smoke plumes drift southeastward into Delhi under prevailing northwesterly winds. Dense winter fog further compounds the problem by reacting with emissions to form secondary pollutants. From February through May, rising temperatures improve vertical mixing, but extreme heat accelerates photochemical reactions that generate ground-level ozone, while pre-monsoon dust storms from the Thar Desert add particulate matter. The summer monsoon (June-September) brings the cleanest air as southwest winds flush pollutants eastward and rainfall scrubs the atmosphere, though high humidity can temporarily increase aerosol formation. Post-monsoon (October) marks the rapid deterioration of air quality as winds shift, temperatures drop, and agricultural burning resumes. Sensitive groups—including children, elderly residents, and those with respiratory or cardiovascular conditions—should minimize outdoor exposure from October through January, particularly during morning hours when inversion layers are strongest. The relatively safer period for outdoor activity occurs during monsoon months when rainfall and ventilation are maximal, though extreme heat in May-June requires heat precautions alongside air quality considerations.
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