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Air quality monitoring gets a boost

Air quality monitoring stations around New South Wales are now connected with each other and deliver up-to-date and accurate data in real-time.

New South Wales now has Australia’s largest integrated air quality monitoring system, made up of over 90 stations located in remote, rural, coastal and urban areas.

This builds on the existing standard long-term air quality monitoring stations across the state and monitoring sites the from 20-year-old ‘DustWatch program’.

DustWatch sites across rural and remote locations have been upgraded to form the NSW rural air quality monitoring network.

DustWatch sites are maintained by our scientists and volunteers.

The challenge

Air pollution can have significant impacts on humans, animals, our natural environment and our infrastructure.

Air pollution results in the premature death of more than 500 people each year in Sydney alone. Human-caused air-pollution also affects the everyday health of many more. Economic costs exceed $5 billion per year, according to a 2023 study.

Dust storms can be extremely damaging. A single dust storm in 2009 cost the NSW economy just under $300 million.

We need accurate, timely air quality data across the state to be able to respond effectively to air pollution events. A state-wide monitoring system needs:

  • a modern monitoring network with suitable equipment
  • high-quality data management and display software
  • people to maintain the equipment and systems.

In the past, the DustWatch sites were managed through a separate system that did not ‘talk’ to the system for standard monitoring stations.

The air monitoring system now connects stations across these areas and also provides region-specific datasets for:

  • regional and rural areas
  • Sydney
  • the Upper Hunter
  • the Lower Hunter and Central Coast
  • the Illawarra.
Installing air quality monitoring equipment