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Live AQI in Shillong

Shillong Air Quality Index (AQI)

As of the latest reading (updated 7 hours ago), Shillong's air quality index is 59 on the NAQI scale, which falls in the Satisfactory category. The dominant pollutant in Shillong today is PM2.5 at 35 µg/m³. Air quality is acceptable; unusually sensitive people may limit prolonged outdoor exertion.

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About Shillong

Nestled in the East Khasi Hills of northeastern India, Shillong serves as Meghalaya's capital and cultural heart, occupying a strategic position at 1,496 meters above sea level on the Shillong Plateau. This subtropical highland city's geography profoundly shapes its air quality dynamics through complex terrain interactions. Surrounded by rolling hills, deep valleys, and dense pine forests, Shillong's urban core clusters within a bowl-like depression that can trap pollutants during temperature inversions, particularly in winter months. The city's location near the Bangladesh border places it within a transitional zone between the Brahmaputra Valley to the north and the Surma Valley to the south, creating unique wind patterns that alternately disperse and concentrate airborne particulates. While Shillong lacks major industrial belts, its proximity to Jaintia Hills' coal mining districts approximately 100 kilometers east introduces periodic dust transport, especially during dry seasons when westerly winds carry mining particulates toward the urban area. The urban-rural gradient shows rapid transitions from dense commercial centers to forested peripheries, with vehicle exhaust and construction dust dominating central zones while biomass burning affects outlying areas. Shillong's high elevation typically promotes better air dispersion than lowland cities, but its valley topography creates microclimates where pollutants accumulate, particularly along major transportation corridors like the Guwahati-Shillong Road. The absence of significant water bodies within the immediate urban basin reduces natural cleansing effects, making precipitation the primary atmospheric purifier.

Air Quality Across Seasons

Shillong's air quality follows a distinct seasonal rhythm shaped by its subtropical highland climate and monsoon patterns. During winter (December-February), cold, dry conditions combine with frequent temperature inversions that trap vehicle exhaust, domestic heating emissions, and transported mining dust, creating the year's worst pollution episodes—particularly hazardous for asthma sufferers and elderly residents who should limit morning outdoor activities when inversion layers are strongest. Spring (March-May) brings gradual warming that improves vertical mixing, though pre-monsoon dust from construction and unpaved roads keeps particulate levels elevated, making late spring the optimal time for outdoor exercise before monsoon humidity arrives. The summer monsoon (June-September) delivers extreme rainfall that dramatically cleanses the atmosphere, with vigorous winds and daily showers scrubbing pollutants from the air—this period offers the healthiest conditions for all residents, though landslide risks require caution during heavy downpours. Autumn (October-November) sees pollution gradually rebuilding as rains diminish and temperature inversions begin reestablishing, with waste burning during festival seasons adding temporary spikes. Sensitive groups should monitor local air quality reports particularly during December-January inversion events and March dust episodes, using morning fog as a visual indicator of poor dispersion conditions. The city's elevation provides some protection from lowland pollution transport, but valley-fog events during peak months can concentrate vehicle emissions along key roadways.

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