To
help spread awareness about air quality, climate-tech startup Respirer Living Sciences has developed
a dashboard that provides real-time access to air quality pollution data. Powered
by Microsoft Azure, this dashboard data can be leveraged to devise solutionsfrom
citizens and policymakers to tackle airpollution.
With
an objective to improve the quality of life for people, the team at Respirer
evaluated several parameters and air quality stood out among them. The startup
realized that people were keen to know about the air quality in their immediate
surroundings. However, the cost of setting up air quality monitoring solutions
was very high, which prompted Respirer to start developing affordable air
quality monitoring platforms, using sensors and IoT. However, sensors sometimes
malfunctioned and recorded unnecessary data and noise which sometimes led to
inaccuracies.
To
achieve complete accuracy in mentoring air quality data, Respirer collaborated with
Microsoft Research (MSR) India’s Center for Societal Impact through Cloud and
Artificial Intelligence (SCAI). The
startup is one of the four organizations in the program’s first cohort. MSR
enabled them to integrate fault detection technology in their platform. Respirerplatforms
alsousea technique called dependable IoT, developed by researchers at MSR, that
monitors the health of IoT-based devices using a fingerprint of their battery’s
performance.
Using
machine learning and data visualization, Respirerbuilt a dashboard, enabled byPower
BI, to studydata from 240 government air quality monitors as part of the
National Clean Air Program tracker.The Power BI dashboard is able to run the
data through Azure’s SQL servers, making the process fast and seamless. More
importantly, it enables the Respirer team to execute all of this with a shorter
turnaround time and with a small development team.It alsoenables government
officials to check if any of their monitoring stations go offline and repair
them in real time.
Ronak Sutaria, Founder of Respirer
Living Sciences said, “About 40 out of the 240 Continuous Air
Quality Monitoring Stations set up by the government are in and around Delhi
alone, which is why it’s no surprise that the city always leads in
conversations around air pollution. Even in places where data exists, it’s
stored in databases that not many track regularly or are not accessible to
citizens. Scientific and accurate data in this space can provide meaningful
insights and increase awareness about air quality across the country to enable
greater involvement and action from citizens and policy makers.”
The
Respirer solutioncosts one-twentieth the price for installation of a regulatory
air quality monitoring system. It provides easy accessto data around historical
trends and levels of different pollutants across individual cities on a yearly
basis or during different times of the day. It also enables anyone to select
different filters to get insights that are meaningful to them, thus eliminating
the need for any data science knowledge.
Ronak
added, “Typically, it would have taken us
four to six months and a team of developers to pull out all the analytics and
visualize that amount of data at these depths. But with Power BI, we were able
to execute this project in just a little under four weeks with just one
analytics engineer.”
Respirer’s
long-term vision is to create a network of low-cost air quality monitoring
sensors to provide a wider scientific view of the air that India breathes. Areasonable
analysis of air quality index in India will require a simplified collection of data
across 4,000 to 8,000 locations in the country.The startup’s plan is to fill this
gap with affordable air quality monitoring devices.
Around
1,000 Respirer devices have been used by housing societies, schools, industrial
companies, and even government organizations for monitoring air quality in
their locations. Respirer is working towards building a platform to make the
data publicly available, across a unified platform, allowing delivery of
hyper-local air quality data so citizens know the quality of airthey are
breathing at not just city level but even at a neighborhood level.