ISLAMABAD: Air quality in Lahore improved on Wednesday morning as wind speeds helped disperse pollutants that had shrouded Pakistan’s second-largest city in thick smog for days, the Punjab government said.
The Swiss-based air monitoring agency IQAir recorded Lahore’s Air Quality Index (AQI) at 158 at 10:53 a.m. local time, placing it sixth on the list of the world’s most polluted major cities, behind Kolkata and Delhi in India, Beijing, Dubai and Cairo.
Punjab province, and its capital Lahore, face a recurring “smog season” from October to February, driven by crop-residue burning, vehicular and industrial emissions, and stagnant winter weather conditions. The hazy blanket has previously pushed the AQI into hazardous levels of above 300 in Lahore in November 2024, forcing school and office closures and reduced construction activity.
“The current wind speed of about 11 kilometers per hour is helping disperse pollution particles, leading to gradual improvement in Lahore’s air quality,” the Punjab administration’s official statement said.
Senior Punjab Minister Maryam Aurangzeb said there was “a marked improvement … being seen in the AQI,” and urged residents to avoid unnecessary travel and refrain from burning waste despite the recent relief.
Punjab has begun targeted “anti-smog gun” operations this season after trial runs, part of a wider push that includes new enforcement rules and traffic measures to cut emissions in the provincial capital.
The smog crisis in Lahore, similar to conditions in India’s capital Delhi, tends to worsen during cooler months as temperature inversion traps pollutants close to the ground.










