Air pollution threatens children's health from the womb through adolescence, increasing risks of respiratory, cognitive, and chronic conditions. Early exposure can cause lifelong harm, underscoring the need for monitoring and protective action.
As climate change progresses and environmental disasters that contribute to air pollution intensify, it is more important than ever to have resilient air quality monitoring.
Climate change and air pollution are both global environmental crises with enormous health, economic, and environmental impacts — but also environmental justice issues.
Many air pollutants — beyond just CO2 — also have an impact on climate change and atmospheric warming, opening the door for further climate change mitigation opportunities.
Amanda List, our Account Executive here at Clarity, works to connect the dots between stakeholders and data to create successful, impact-driven air quality monitoring projects.
As air quality monitoring technology progresses to allow for more localized, specialized measurement of air pollutants, air quality policy has also become more targeted.
Low-cost sensors can be used in a wide range of different air quality monitoring projects, either alone or in conjunction with reference-grade air quality monitors.
Communicating air quality data in an effective, actionable way is an essential part of using air quality data to enact policy and behavioral change to improve the air.
As our Environmental Project Manager, Katie Moore works closely with community and environmental justice groups to ensure the success of Clarity’s air quality monitoring networks.
In the first conversation of our "The People that Power Clarity" series, Paul Shelman, VP of Software, joins us to discuss how the work of software powers Clarity forward.
Technology can be used to move policy, by providing better datasets to mayors. Panelist David Lu, CEO of Clarity Movement, highlighted the power of data.
We now have smart homes and smart cars, so it’s no surprise that our cities are becoming smarter every day. One problem plaguing many big cities is air pollution, and one company is using technology to help remedy the problem.
TenX has invested in Clarity, a three-year-old company that makes air-pollution monitoring devices which provide hyper-localised and real-time air-quality readings in metropolitan areas.