Live AQI in Amritsar
Amritsar Air Quality Index (AQI)
As of the latest reading (updated 7 hours ago), Amritsar's air quality index is 135 on the NAQI scale, which falls in the Moderate category. The dominant pollutant in Amritsar today is PM2.5 at 70 µg/m³. Sensitive groups — children, elderly, and those with heart or lung conditions — should reduce prolonged outdoor exertion.
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About Amritsar
Nestled in northwestern India's Punjab region, Amritsar occupies a strategic position just 28 kilometers from the volatile Indo-Pakistan border, creating a unique cross-border pollution dynamic that significantly impacts air quality. The city sits at approximately 234 meters above sea level on the flat, fertile Indo-Gangetic Plain, a vast agricultural expanse that dominates the surrounding landscape. This terrain, devoid of significant natural barriers, allows pollutants to travel unimpeded across state and national boundaries, particularly during winter when stubble burning from neighboring agricultural districts converges with local emissions. Amritsar's urban character blends historic religious significance—centered around the Golden Temple—with growing industrial zones specializing in textiles, food processing, and manufacturing, creating distinct pollution hotspots within the city. The urban-rural gradient is sharply defined, with dense urban cores transitioning abruptly to intensive agricultural lands where rice and wheat cultivation dominate. Notably, the city lacks substantial natural water bodies that might help disperse pollutants, though the historic Amrit Sarovar tank provides limited local humidity. Its position within Punjab's industrial belt, combined with heavy reliance on road transport along major national highways, creates a persistent baseline of vehicular and industrial emissions that interact with agricultural burning patterns to produce some of South Asia's most severe seasonal air pollution episodes.
Air Quality Across Seasons
Amritsar's air quality follows a dramatic seasonal rhythm dictated by agricultural cycles, meteorological conditions, and urban activity. During autumn (October-November), post-monsoon stagnation combines with widespread stubble burning of paddy residue across Punjab's farmlands, creating hazardous pollution episodes that often reduce visibility to dangerous levels. Winter (December-February) brings the peak pollution season as cold temperatures, dense fog, and frequent temperature inversions trap pollutants near the ground, with December and January being particularly hazardous months when cold waves intensify these effects. Sensitive groups including children, elderly residents, and those with respiratory conditions should minimize outdoor exposure during these months, especially during morning hours when fog and inversion layers are most pronounced. Spring (March-May) offers gradual improvement as rising temperatures increase atmospheric mixing, though extreme heat events in late spring can occasionally elevate ozone levels. The summer monsoon (June-September) provides the cleanest air of the year as southwest winds and heavy rainfall effectively scavenge pollutants from the atmosphere, making this period most favorable for outdoor activities. However, even during cleaner months, construction dust and persistent vehicular emissions maintain a background pollution level that requires ongoing vigilance for those with chronic health conditions.
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Explore long-run CPCB data, PM2.5 trends, and seasonal patterns across Indian cities.