Air Quality score
Health-oriented air-quality conditions with context from WHO, EEA, and EPA benchmarks.
Berlin's air-quality profile benefits from strong European monitoring and ongoing transit and street redesign.
Health-oriented air-quality conditions with context from WHO, EEA, and EPA benchmarks.
80/100
Strong baseline air quality and improving trend.
PM2.5 and NO2
Traffic-related and regional pollutants remain central.
Strong
Street redesign and clean-air policies reinforce progress.
This HTML table mirrors the visible score cards so important comparison data is never trapped in a browser-only chart.
| Metric | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Clean-air score | 80/100 | Among the better-performing major Western capitals. |
| Primary pollutant watch | PM2.5 and NO2 | Mobility transition supports continuing improvement. |
| Policy momentum | Strong | Public-realm investment is a continuing lever. |
A crawlable comparison across every indexed city makes it easy to scan how this module changes between metros.
| City | Score | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Berlin (this page) | 80/100 | Berlin's air-quality profile benefits from strong European monitoring and ongoing transit and street redesign. |
| Copenhagen | 88/100 | Copenhagen performs well on clean-air context, helped by compact mobility, regional monitoring, and strong European air-quality governance. |
| Sydney | 82/100 | Sydney has strong baseline air quality with episodic wildfire-smoke and bushfire events as the main exposure pressure. |
| Singapore | 80/100 | Singapore performs well on clean air with periodic regional haze events as the main exposure pressure. |
| Toronto | 80/100 | Toronto has solid baseline air quality with episodic wildfire-smoke events as the main exposure spike. |
| Tokyo | 78/100 | Tokyo's air profile benefits from strong governance but still requires attention to fine particles, ozone, and heat-related exposure. |
| Paris | 76/100 | Paris benefits from European monitoring and mobility reform, while PM2.5, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone remain key health signals. |
| London | 75/100 | London's clean-air policy has improved exposure trends, with PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide remaining the key health signals. |
| New York | 72/100 | New York has extensive monitoring and policy capacity, but particulate and ozone exposure remain important health signals. |
Air-quality scoring weighs pollutant exposure and policy momentum. Berlin's baseline is solid with continued improvement on traffic-related pollutants.
Read this module with the main city profile because single-topic pages can miss tradeoffs. A city with a high energy score can still have housing pressure, and a city with strong opportunity can still carry health exposure risk.
These pages use trusted institutional references for methodology and context. Mock values are typed and ready to be replaced by API-backed city datasets without changing route structure.
Used to normalize air-quality indicators toward health-protective benchmarks.
Used where European city comparisons need monitored air-quality context.
These links connect module pages back to city, ranking, and sibling topic paths with crawlable href values.
Return to the complete Berlin profile with all module scores and source context.
Affordability, essential costs, and day-to-day financial pressure for residents.
Clean-energy readiness, grid resilience, and solar or efficiency opportunity signals.
Personal safety, institutional trust, and resilience signals informed by international safety and crime data.
Broadband and mobile connectivity quality, latency, and digital-readiness signals for residents and remote workers.
Climate exposure, hazard frequency, and adaptation context for floods, heat, storms, and wildfires.
A balanced ranking of cities across affordability, air quality, clean-energy readiness, and resilience.
Cities that combine strong services, mobility, safety, clean air, and resilience into a healthy day-to-day profile.