November 20, 2024 3 minutes read

Imagine waking up to clean air in one city while another chokes on smog. Why do some pollution crises make headlines, while others stay unnoticed?

The Wizikey Pollution News Analysis Report 2023-2024 uncovers startling disparities in media coverage across Indian cities. It’s not just about pollution levels—it’s about whose stories are heard.

Before you dive in, let’s hear what this means for our cities and us.

Methodology: Unveiling the Patterns

Wizikey analyzed over 500,000 news articles from 50,000 publications (January 2023–November 2024) using its advanced AI algorithms. AQI data from www.aqi.in was cross-referenced to measure the disparity between pollution levels and media attention. This approach highlights critical gaps in reporting.

Using its advanced AI-powered news analysis, Wizikey groups cities into four categories, each telling a different story of air quality and attention.

The Four Faces of Pollution Coverage

Every city tells a unique story about pollution. Wizikey’s report groups them into four categories based on air quality and media attention.

  1. Crisis Cities: High Pollution, High News Coverage

Observation: Delhi gets over 75,000 articles, overshadowing nearby cities like Noida, despite similar AQI levels. Delhi sets an example of how pollution crises should be reported. Read graph below.

Wizikey's analysis on pollution news reporting from (Jan 2023 - Nov 2024)
Crisis Cities Graph

2. Silent Sufferers: High Pollution, Low News Coverage

Observation: These cities have AQI levels on par with Delhi, but their coverage is only 5% of Delhi’s. Without media attention, these cities lack the pressure needed to drive policy and awareness. Read graph below.

Wizikey's analysis on pollution news reporting from (Jan 2023 - Nov 2024)

3. Invisible Danger Zones: High Pollution, No News Coverage

Observation: These cities receive less than 0.06% of Delhi’s media coverage, despite equally hazardous air. Silence leads to inaction, putting lives at risk. Read graph below.

Wizikey's analysis on pollution news reporting from (Jan 2023 - Nov 2024)
Invisible Danger Zones

4. Liveable Cities: Low Pollution, Low News Coverage

Observation: These cities enjoy cleaner air and appropriately low media coverage.

Wizikey's analysis on low pollution and low news cities

Pollution Isn’t Seasonal, So Why Is Reporting?

Pollution reporting is often reactive, spiking during crises but fading as the seasons change. For example, Delhi saw 16,000 articles during its peak smog period in November 2023 but only 5,000 articles in 2024—a 70% decline. Read graph below.

Wizikey's analysis on Delhi pollution news

This reactive approach fails to spotlight the root causes of pollution, such as stubble burning, vehicular emissions, and industrial waste, which require sustained media focus to drive change.

The Cost of Ignored Pollution

Behind the numbers are real human stories:

  • Families battling respiratory illnesses.
  • Schools forced to shut during smog emergencies.
  • Workers risking their health in toxic environments.

Yet, media silence in Silent Sufferers and Invisible Danger Zones denies these communities the attention they need. Media intelligence can change this narrative by identifying gaps and pushing for equitable reporting.

What Can Be Done?

  1. Year-Round Media Strategy: Encourage consistent coverage beyond crisis months.
  2. Leverage Media Intelligence: Tools like Wizikey can spotlight underreported areas, driving awareness and policy changes.

Be Part of the Change

Pollution isn’t just an environmental crisis; it’s a public health emergency. By using Media Intelligence and Analysis, we can ensure every city’s story is heard.

Start by tracking your city’s media footprint and amplifying the conversation with Wizikey

#MyRightToBreathe