Global Clean Air

Air Tracker expands to Rio de Janeiro, helping officials enforce air quality standards

  • EDF's Sergio Sanchez unveils Air Tracker for Rio de Janeiro at the U20 Mayors Summit in Rio de Janeiro on November 15, 2024. Photo by Alex Franco for Environmental Defense Fund.
    EDF's Sergio Sanchez unveils Air Tracker for Rio de Janeiro at the U20 Mayors Summit in Rio de Janeiro on November 15, 2024. Photo by Alex Franco for Environmental Defense Fund.

What’s new: At the Urban 20 Mayors (U20) Summit, Environmental Defense Fund announced the expansion of Air Tracker—its cutting-edge air quality monitoring tool—to Rio de Janeiro today. Air Tracker is an interactive, real-time mapping tool that uses trusted scientific models to track air pollution sources accurately. It combines air pollution and weather forecasting to reveal not only which pollutants are in the air but also where they originate. Learn more about Air Tracker in this short explainer video.

Actions to lower air pollution in Brazil’s major cities can bring significant health benefits. According to the World Health Organization, around 61,000 Brazilians die prematurely each year due to current air pollution levels. Air Tracker will provide valuable insights to national and city officials as they implement Brazil’s new air quality law, enacted earlier this year, which aims to help 216 million Brazilians breathe cleaner air by 2030. Air Tracker is free and publicly available and can therefore also empower residents to identify polluters in their communities and flag them for regulators.

What they’re saying: Officials at the national and state levels expressed enthusiasm about the potential of Air Tracker to assist them in their efforts to cut pollution in urban and rural areas alike. “We are excited to incorporate the advanced capabilities of the Air Tracker into our pollution management toolkit,” said Rafael Barbosa Campos, Air Quality manager of the Rio de Janeiro State Environment Agency. “This technology will allow us to identify sources more quickly and accurately, in addition to strengthening collaboration with communities to reduce emissions at the source. It will help ensure cleaner air and better health for our residents.”

“The implementation of Air Tracker in Brazilian cities is a major step, directly benefiting millions of residents and setting a model for improving urban air quality across Brazil and beyond,” added Brazil’s National Secretary of Urban Environment, Adalberto Maluf. “Nationally, it also brings new potential to monitor rural areas, tracking wildfire smoke and pollution sources in critical regions like the Amazon.”

How does Air Tracker work? When users drop a pin on Air Tracker’s map, it visualizes data on some key measures:

  • Local air pollution levels (currently PM2.5 and PM10)
  • Key areas where sources are likely located
  • The path pollution travels, based on wind speed and direction

Air Tracker provides both real-time and historical data, allowing users to look back up to 6 months to understand long-term trends or the impact of specific polluting events such as wildfires, intentional burning or industrial accidents. Its unified data view provides metrics for informed decision-making, while its capabilities allow for quick responses to pollution spikes.

With support from the Clean Air Fund and the Breathe Cities Program, Air Tracker empowers city and national governments by helping them identify pollution hotspots, enforce regulations in a more targeted way and engage communities in safeguarding public health and the climate. Today’s launch in Rio de Janeiro expands Air Tracker internationally for the first time—an expansion that is expected to continue with the addition of São Paulo in the coming weeks.

What’s next? Environmental Defense Fund is currently partnering with officials in Rio de Janeiro to provide training on Air Tracker’s capabilities and how to best integrate the tool to support their monitoring and enforcement systems. Key partners include:

  • The Ministry of Environment and Climate Change of Brazil
  • Rio de Janeiro’s Instituto Estadual de Ambiente (INEA)
  • The Secretaria Municipal de Ambiente da Cidade (SMAC)
  • The State of São Paulo Environmental Company (CETESB)
  • Civil society organizations and academia.

EDF’s Senior Policy Director of Global Clean Air, Sergio Sánchez, expressed gratitude to city leaders. “We’re excited to partner with officials and communities in Brazil to launch Air Tracker, empowering residents to understand their local air quality and hold polluters accountable. This is a key step toward scaling clean air solutions, strengthening regulations and advancing public health for all.”

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Six ways to ramp up climate and clean air action in 2025

Six ways to ramp up climate and clean air action in 2025

2024 has been a significant year for the climate and air pollution crisis, both in terms of the mounting impacts and increased action. Extreme climate events like hurricanes and wildfires devastated communities around the world, forcing the issue to the forefront of public consciousness. Meanwhile countries, companies and communities took some noteworthy actions to track and reduce emissions, including major commitments made at COP28 to cut methane followed by the launch of MethaneSAT and the first UN resolution on clean air.

Climate change and air pollution are dual challenges that severely impact our health and as such must be solved together.

EDF together with the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) and Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) convened cross-sector clean air leaders to discuss how we can take an integrated approach to cutting greenhouse gases and air pollutants to protect human health. Together, we took stock of how far we’ve come, assessed some hard truths and identified the biggest opportunities in front of us to secure meaningful wins. The conversation captured some important learnings in the struggle to accelerate clean air and climate action that help point towards a pathway forward. Here are six takeaways.

1. Investments in data and research are paying off

Dr. Maria Neira, Director of the Public Health, Environment and Social Determinants of Health Department of the World Health Organization, shared how she has been encouraged by a shift in the recent global pollution dialogue away from merely describing the problem and toward building solutions. We know that research and monitoring efforts, some of which EDF has led, have been essential to understanding the source and impacts of pollution and to identifying solutions. The dialogue shift described by Dr. Neira suggests those efforts are starting to pay off as governments and companies are using pollution insights to identify solutions.

2. Cutting emissions takes resources and capacity

Global air pollution mitigation is severely underfunded, a crucial issue explored more below. But Martina Otto, head of UNEP’s CCAC, emphasized that governments need technical assistance as much as funding to help them set-up and maintain air quality monitoring systems that can enable effective enforcement, track clean air actions and identify new pollution sources.

This was echoed by Brazil’s National Secretary of Urban Environment, Adalberto Maluf, who outlined his country’s current efforts to implement air pollution standards including upgrading the national air quality monitoring network. The CCAC’s Clean Air Flagship, launched earlier this year, is a meaningful step toward meeting this need by mobilizing funds and fostering a community of practice where countries can learn from each other and share resources through the Air Quality Management Exchange.

3. We need to get better at tailoring our messaging

During her remarks, Valerie Hickey, Global Director for Environment, Natural Resources and Blue Economy at the World Bank, called for a fresh look at how we communicate about air pollution and its health risks, especially to those most affected. She gave an example of a farmer in Northern India who continues to engage in agricultural burning in full knowledge of the health risks, because he also knows that without it, he couldn’t earn enough to sustain his family.

In a second example, Hickey described a health minister who is told that every $1 she invests in cleaner air returns $9 in health benefits. While the Minister knows this is true in the long term, she has several more urgent needs where the $1 she has can return $2 or $3 right away. Throw in the pressure to deliver before a coming election—what would you do? Making the case for avoided loss doesn’t often move the policy or political decision maker. “We have to find the message that meets the person we’re speaking to,” concluded Hickey.

4. Companies are stepping up to track their emissions and implement reduction plans. More need to follow suit.

Many countries and some companies are developing greenhouse gas inventories to support plans to cut emissions and meet net zero goals. But few have integrated air pollutants into these assessments to address the tradeoffs and synergies. That’s why SEI created a guide to help companies track climate and air pollution emissions across their supply chains and design plans to reduce them. Research Associate in the Air Pollution Group, Eleni Michalopoulou, explained how SEI is partnering with Inter IKEA group, a member of the World Economic Forum’s Alliance for Clean Air, to do just that.

With SEI’s help, IKEA recently established a goal and detailed plan to reduce the company’s climate emissions by 50% by 2030. According to IKEA’s Head of Climate and Air Quality, Sriram Rajagopal, the company is evaluating its entire supply chain, from raw materials to product production, shipping and even end of life disposal. He says IKEA is on track to meet its goal and maybe even exceed it on key air pollutants such as PM2.5, black carbon, nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide (SOx).

5. Some countries have already made great strides, and more are stepping up

Angela Churie Kallhauge, EDF’s Executive Vice President for Impact, opened the event by describing the immense progress that the city of Beijing has made on air pollution in recent years, going from smog to blue skies in little more than a decade. This example demonstrates the potential to cut pollution and drastically improve health in a short time frame as we continue to decarbonize. This is a differentiator for clean air action that our community can do a better job to highlight for leaders and funders.

We also learned about how Brazil has been taking significant steps to cut pollution. Sec. Maluf shared how the country recently approved its first ever national air quality program, which will commission a detailed emissions inventory, improve its national monitoring network and tighten air quality standards. EDF is assisting Brazil’s government in this effort by advising on the new standards, developing an integrated approach to managing climate and air pollutants and expanding our Air Tracker tool to its two largest cities, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.

6. Air quality funding isn’t likely to surge any time soon – it’s time to get creative

Jane Burston, CEO of the Clean Air Fund (CAF) brought another dose of reality to the conversation by sharing the results of CAF’s latest State of Global Air Quality Funding Report: Global financing for air quality projects saw a tiny increase in recent years, but remains dismally low at about 1% of global development and 2% of public climate funds. Burston echoed an important point made by Hickey from the World Bank: Air quality is unlikely to see a dramatic funding boost anytime soon, so we must find more creative ways to reallocate or repurpose money that’s already available to maximize benefits for clean air, climate and health. Both speakers shared a few thoughts for how to do this, including repurposing agricultural subsidies, providing seed funding to de-risk private sector investments, and strengthening our case to the philanthropic sector.

What’s next: This conversation brought a grounded optimism to the real progress we can make to tackle the global air pollution crisis. While low funding remains our greatest challenge, our messaging about the scope and urgency of the problem has broken through to countries, communities and increasingly companies around the world. Now it is incumbent upon us to translate what we know into meaningful, tailored stories and to focus on metric-driven solutions that can help redirect existing resources to deliver emissions reductions. By taking these next steps while approaching air pollution and climate change as the interrelated problems that they are, we can deliver tangible health benefits to a more people than ever in the coming critical years.

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New #WorldCleanAirDay podcast: How we’re adapting Air Tracker in the U.S., China and soon Brazil

On September 7, for the 5th International Day of Clean Air for Blue Skies, EDF is highlighting how our cutting-edge tools are advancing the fight against air pollution in a new podcast episode, hosted by our China team. Reliable data on pollution sources is crucial, and that’s why we’ve developed Air Tracker—a free online tool using the latest science to trace local pollution like never before.

Listen in to hear from three EDF experts: Tammy Thompson on how Air Tracker came about and what it can do, Ziwei Luo on how Air Tracker has been localized in a major city in China, and Sergio Sánchez  on how we’re adapting Air Tracker to be of greatest use to city and national officials in Brazil. Air Tracker is already active in the US and China and is expected to reach Brazil by year-end.

Listen to the full episode here: Adapting Air Quality Monitoring Across Regions through Air Tracker

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EDF team visits Brazil to expand Air Tracker, support clean air action

The EDF team finalizes its partnership with the Secretaria Municipal de Meio Ambiente da Cidade after a meeting with the City of Rio De Janeiro.

The EDF team finalizes its partnership with the Secretaria Municipal de Meio Ambiente da Cidade after a meeting with the City of Rio De Janeiro.

What’s new: Our recent trip to Brazil in June gave EDF the opportunity to formalize partnerships with city and state officials in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, as these megacities seek new ways to better track and address air pollution.

Alex Franco, Sergio Sanchez and I also met with city experts, academics and community members to discuss how Air Tracker can help these growing metro areas as they try to address persistent challenges from soot and other pollutants.

These cities pose new challenges for Air Tracker, such as integrating a global weather forecasting model for the Brazilian expansion and addressing data limitations in areas like modeling, emissions inventories and ambient air quality, but we’re looking forward to learning how we can adapt the tool to meet the needs of Brazil’s cities.

Why it matters: Most Brazilians (90%) live in cities, where air pollution levels exceed the World Health Organization’s recommendations. The Brazilian government is set to adopt a resolution in September that will establish gradually stricter standards for soot (PM2.5) and other air pollutants over the next 20 years. However, current air quality levels expose millions to unhealthy air. We hope our work there will help Brazil achieve its air quality goals to protect public health and serve as a model across the region.

The good news: Local, state, and national leaders are eager to tackle air pollution. EDF has partnered with the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change since last year to enhance regulations and enforcement plans to help reduce air pollution on a national scale.

EDF has also partnered with local authorities in Rio de Janeiro (SMAC, Rio de Janeiro’s Municipal Secretariat of Environment) and São Paulo (CETESB, the São Paulo State Environmental Agency) to deploy Air Tracker to analyze patterns in air pollution and learn how it moves through the city. This will help identify major sources and develop effective solutions. They’ve already given us a list of hotspots like industrial areas, warehouses where vehicles idle and traffic chokepoints where they feel Air Tracker can help make an impact.

Beyond that, we’re excited that local leaders are interested in connecting with community partners as well as state and health officials to build broad support for clean air solutions.

Our trip also gave us the opportunity to meet with nonprofit community leaders and academics from across Latin America at an air quality modeling conference, where Alex Franco presented on Air Tracker. These kinds of local connections will be critical as we improve Air Tracker, so it can meet the policy needs of Brazilian leaders and the residents they serve.

Go Deeper: This trip was made possible thanks to the Clean Air Fund and its generous support for the global expansion of Air Tracker. It’s also part of our ongoing efforts to reduce air pollution across Latin America and the Caribbean.

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EDF partners with Brazil’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change on strategy to update air quality standards

EDF’s Global Clean Air team examines local air quality management data with local government partners in Brazil. Photo by Sergio Sanchez.

EDF’s Global Clean Air team examines local air quality management data with local government partners in Brazil. Photo by Sergio Sanchez.

What’s new: EDF’s Global Clean Air (GCA) team met earlier this month with a working group within Brazil’s national government charged with updating the country’s air quality standards. EDF is providing technical support to the group, led by Brazil’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change (MMA), to overhaul the country’s air quality management strategy, aiming to establish stricter standards. The purpose of the new strategy is to align Brazil’s air quality standards with World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines by 2024, following a recent Supreme Court mandate.

The partnership grew out of EDF’s regional initiative with the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP). The purpose of that initiative is to support and connect senior leaders as they pursue innovative clean air actions in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC).

Why it matters: The largest and most populous country in the LAC region, Brazil witnesses 60,000 premature deaths each year due to air pollution. Further, the country loses 2-3% of its annual GDP in health and livelihood related costs. By improving its air quality management, Brazil will not only have an opportunity to significantly improve the health of its nearly 220 million inhabitants and boost its economy, but to also set an example for the rest of the region and the world while driving progress on its climate goals.

The details: Key components of Brazil’s new air quality management strategy on which EDF is providing support include:

  • Setting up-to-date air quality standards, climate pollution reduction targets and an implementation roadmap
  • Supporting advanced air quality monitoring systems and guides for effective implementation
  • Initiatives to center and public health as a key focus of air quality management
  • An emphasis on best practices, tools and community-led solutions

The strategy will also introduce cutting edge technologies and robust tools for ensuring compliance, with a focus on cross-sector partnerships and policy innovation. It further proposes innovative financing mechanisms that would enable cities and states to independently mobilize additional funds for enhanced source identification and cross-sector efforts.

What’s next: Once the new air quality standards and monitoring system are set up, EDF aims to continue providing support as Brazil moves toward implementation, working to unlock major investments in solutions that cut emissions, such as transport electrification, clean energies and sustainable agricultural practices.

EDF’s LAC-focused Global Clean Air team includes Senior Policy Director, Sergio Sanchez, Senior Economics and Policy Analyst, Abhinand Krishnashankar and consultant Armando Retama. For more on EDF’s partnership on air quality management with Brazil, check out this blog from October, 2023.

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