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For anyone wondering what a failing grade actually means, grades are assigned on a weigted average of the following:
Unless I've got something horribly wrong it seems like the American Lung Association is saying 50%+ Americans live in an area with an AQI above 225. If that's true it's kind of out of whack with the online sites that usually say anywhere between 30 to 70.
https://www.lung.org/research/sota/about-the-report/methodology
Perhaps someone else can read it and correct me, it's possible I've misunderstood something as it's like 6am and I haven't slept yet.
No, I think that this rating just has an extremely high bar for what it considers failing. If I read this right you could fail by having 10 orange days over 3 years.
To support this they state,
So 21 orange days in 3 years represents 98th percentile and they are looking at 99th, so 10 days sounds about right.
I think 35 ug/m^3 is AQI 100...
Ooooo that does make more sense!
I suppose the bar is set for like, aiming for people to be living in good conditions 100% of the time. If they're not in good conditions basically at any time then they're failing them.
10 days is low enough that the wildfires could be the main cause of the data change?
Could be, the article says it's due to heat, drought, and wildfires