Denver's Air Quality Remains Excellent Through Saturday
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概要
As of Friday evening, the highest Air Quality Index (AQI) hit just 39 for fine particulate matter (PM2.5), firmly in the **good** category—safe for all outdoor activities.[1][2] Current monitors in the Denver metro, like CHAT, report moderate ozone levels at a daily high AQI of 67 (60 PPB), still well below unhealthy thresholds.[3] Ozone, PM2.5, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen dioxide are all expected to stay **good** through Saturday.[1]
This clean air bucks Denver's occasional winter inversions, where cold air traps pollutants near the ground. Instead, favorable winds from the west—common in late February—flush out haze, a pattern aided by recent cold snaps.[1][7] Yesterday's PM2.5 peaked at 6 µg/m³ near I-25, far under WHO safe limits.[3]
Historically, 2026 shows a 30% AQI improvement over 2025, with 90% of days already very low risk.[4] No smoke from distant wildfires is impacting the surface, despite upper-atmosphere haze elsewhere in Colorado.[2]
Residents can help sustain this: maintain vehicles to cut emissions, as a poorly tuned car pollutes far more.[1][2] With light snow possible along the Front Range, visibility might dip slightly, but breathing easy is the norm today.[1][7]
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