Area Overview

The world’s most detailed air quality maps, now available in your neighborhood.

Decisions are only as good as the information behind them. Our high-resolution data provides the measurements required to make more informed decisions about emissions reductions. Aclima deployed its fleet of vehicles driven by local community members to measure air pollution on each block from July through September, 2021. Aclima combined measurements to calculate average pollution levels at any address. In East Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, and West Commerce, we looked at carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone (O3), methane (CH4), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and black carbon (BC) levels. We analyzed over 38 million 1-second data points based on these seven pollutants and discovered patterns and areas with elevated concentrations of unhealthy air pollutants.

Air Quality Lookup by Address

See an air quality report for any address within East Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, & West Commerce.

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Updates to Aclima Data

June 2022


Summary: Aclima has updated the LA 2021 public report to reflect our use of improved calculations for analyzing and mapping the data. The data mapped from the Los Angeles measurement period, which covered July 1 through September 30, 2021, is now modestly different from those in the first version of the public report, released in February 2022.

What is impacted?

The underlying 1-Hz, or 1-second, data as collected by the vehicles is unchanged. However, data products, including products that build on ambient concentration aggregates at the segment and hexagon scale, have changed modestly.

Why are the data products changing?

  • In these final reports, we used a streamlined order of calculations, which were completed using software for increased accuracy.
  • We improved the base algorithms that are used to calculate the data.
  • We fixed a timezone error in the final Black Carbon ambient concentrations. Because we use data obtained from a secondary source to normalize our data (see: Methodology), this error affected the normalization process and therefore what data showed in the first version of the report.

Overview of changes and impacts on the report:

  • The largest changes (~+/- 10%) are seen in BC (Black Carbon) data. There are smaller changes (~+/- 8%) in other pollutants.
  • Typically, the maps will now indicate that more hexagons are above the local regulatory median and that more segments are impacted by diesel pollution.
  • The new spatial aggregates reflect higher confidence, improving the spatial representativeness of the data and the ability to see differences between neighboring hexagons.
  • Now that the calculations are produced by software rather than manual calculations, there is increased accuracy and traceability.