Our city is on India's official list of cities working to clean their air. Together — with shared evidence, civic pressure, and better systems for waste and green cover — we can move faster. This is where that conversation lives.
Live readings from monitoring stations around the city — AIIMS (CPCB), Bhatagaon New ISBT, Krishak Nagar, and more — via the World Air Quality Index Project. Numbers are updated continuously.
Data from WAQI / aqicn.org. AQI follows the US EPA standard. Stations operated by CPCB, Chhattisgarh SPCB, and the global GAIA monitoring network.
A photo from your street is more powerful than a thousand complaints sent into the void. Add a location, and we'll point you to the municipal officer who can act on it. Every report joins the public record.
A photo + a location is all it takes. Takes 30 seconds.
Tap to upload or drag a photo here
JPG, PNG up to 10MBSelect your zone to see the municipal officers who can act on your report — with their direct phone numbers.
Photos from across Raipur, submitted by neighbours, students, shopkeepers, and parents. Each one is tagged to the officer who can act on it. This is what we're working with — and what we're working to change.
Every report with GPS location, plotted on a map. Red pins are pending. Yellow are verified by the team. Green are resolved. Click a pin to see the photo.
Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors. Tiles by CARTO.
A cleaner, cooler, more breathable Raipur isn't built in one push. It's a series of fixable problems — and citizen pressure on each one moves the needle.
Mixed waste means landfills, open burning, and clogged nallahs. Wet, dry, and hazardous sorting at the household level is the single biggest lever we have. We're building tools to help RWAs and apartment societies adopt segregation, ward by ward.
One person calling the RMC rarely moves things. A hundred people forwarding the same geo-tagged complaint usually does. Once you sign a petition with us, you'll get periodic alerts when neighbours flag issues nearby — and a clear ask you can make of your zone officer in 60 seconds.
Raipur summers now routinely cross 44°C. Tree cover lowers ambient temperatures by 2–4°C and traps particulate matter. We're mapping where Raipur most needs new green cover — and lobbying for plantation drives that survive past the photo-op.
Raipur is one of 131 cities under India's National Clean Air Programme, with a target to cut PM10 by 40% by 2026. Citizens deserve to see whether we're hitting that — month by month, station by station. This site is one small part of that transparency.
Sign once and we'll keep you in the loop — periodic updates on what's been reported, where civic pressure is needed, and how to participate in upcoming clean-up drives, plantation efforts, and ward-level meetings. No spam. Just things you can actually do.