The Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) converts air pollution concentrations into their impact on life expectancy. Through the AQLI’s hyper-local data, users anywhere on Earth can zoom into their district and see how much longer they would live if policies were to reduce pollution to meet the World Health Organization’s guideline, a national standard, or a user-defined target. This information can help inform local communities and policymakers about the benefits of air pollution policies in perhaps the most important measure that exists: longer lives.
Local information about air pollution.
The AQLI is rooted in peer-reviewed research by an international team of scholars, including Michael Greenstone from the University of Chicago, which for the first time quantified the causal relationship between long-term human exposure to air pollution and life expectancy.
This research is based on pollution data at the very high concentrations that prevail in many parts of the world, unlike previous work that has relied on evidence from the low levels experienced in places like the United States.
The Index combines this research with hyper-localized, global particulate matter satellite data. This unique approach makes the AQLI the first pollution index to show what the threat of air pollution means to a person’s life anywhere in the world.
The work of the Air Quality Life Index is made possible through the generous support of the following individuals and institutions: