Smoke from Canadian wildfires drifting into Minnesota degraded air quality across the state Wednesday, with pollution reaching record levels unhealthy for all groups, not just those most at risk.
The wildfire smoke prompted the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) to expand an air quality alert for northern Minnesota to include central Minnesota, effective until 6 a.m. Friday. A separate alert was in effect due to high levels of ozone for southeast Minnesota until 8 p.m. Wednesday.
By Wednesday afternoon, air quality levels in parts of the state had reached the red level, which is unhealthy for everyone and particularly dangerous for people in sensitive groups — those with asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), diabetes or heart disease, as well as children and seniors.
Nick Witcraft, an air quality meteorologist with the MPCA, said that Wednesday's smoke was the worst on record for the Twin Cities. While 2021 had worse air quality in parts of northern Minnesota, Witcraft said this year's bout of poor air quality is more widespread and worse in the Twin Cities.
"I think it's fair to say probably this one now is the worst episode in the Twin Cities," he said.
It was a challenge to compare the hourly readings showing up on monitoring websites, he said, because historical Air Quality Index (AQI) data is averaged over a 24-hour period.
But at 6 p.m. Wednesday, St. Paul had the worst air quality in the United States, with a score of 256, according to AirNow.gov, the official U.S. AQI site. While the AQI index goes up to 500, readings above 200 are considered sufficiently hazardous that outdoor activities are discouraged. St. Cloud's AQI was 202. In comparison, the agency said the air-quality score at the U.S. embassy in Beijing was 86 on Wednesday.
When wildfire smoke traveled south from Canada in July 2021, one daylong average for the Twin Cities reached 182 AQI, solidly in the red category, Witcraft said. One monitor just south of downtown reached an hourly reading of 215 AQI, or the purple, "very unhealthy" category. But Witcraft said this smoke coverage may not be considered as bad as the 2021 event, because the haze is expected to clear much more quickly, by Thursday at midday.