We’re proud to share that Clarity has become the second commercial air quality PM2.5 sensor to be approved for inclusion on the AirNow Fire and Smoke Map (FASM), following years of technical collaboration and data validation alongside U.S. EPA.
Dr. Sunni Ivey joined us for a conversation about her air quality and environmental justice research and her use of low-cost sensors to better understand human pollution exposure.
Low-cost sensors serve as a valuable tool during increasingly severe wildfire seasons to supply data and inform decision-making to protect public health.
By leveraging the variety of air quality monitoring technologies in use today, air quality monitoring programs can arrive at a more holistic understanding of air quality.
In the last installment of our series on the USEPA’s low-cost sensor performance targets, we dive into the importance of calibrating low-cost sensor data to meet these targets.
With droughts intensifying and record-setting heat plaguing Western North America, we have developed an improved correction model for the 2021 wildfire season.
Our webinar panelists share insights on how to best face the challenges that come with deploying low-cost sensors in urban environments and leverage them in hybrid networks.
Under AB 617, environmental justice communities in California can establish community monitoring networks and gather data to support policy change and community health.
In the first installment of our series on USEPA low-cost sensor performance protocols, we discuss how these protocols set the stage for effective and accurate low-cost sensor use.
Clarity Movement Co. and the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) of Nigeria announced today that they have entered into a letter of intent
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.