BANGKOK – PM2.5, the tiny air pollutant people can’t see, keeps chipping away at health across Thailand and especially in Chiang Rai. New figures from the Air Quality Life Index (AQLI), created by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC), show a clear takeaway.
If Thailand lowered annual PM2.5 to the World Health Organization (WHO) guideline of 5 micrograms per cubic meter (μg/m³), the average person could live 1.8 years longer.
In 2023, Thailand’s national annual average PM2.5 level reached 23.1 μg/m³, almost five times the WHO guideline. That level touched the entire population of about 69.5 million. It also went beyond Thailand’s own national standard of 15 μg/m³ for most people, which keeps air pollution high on the list of public health threats.
Several everyday sources feed this problem. Traffic exhaust adds a steady stream of pollution. Industrial activity also contributes. On top of that, agricultural burning and seasonal forest fires can push levels much higher, especially during haze periods.

Chiang Rai Takes the Hardest Hit
Northern Thailand carries a heavier burden, partly because smoke can drift across borders and mix with local burning. As a result, several provinces face repeated haze seasons and very high PM2.5 exposure. Chiang Rai stands out as one of the most affected areas in the country.
Here’s what the AQLI estimates for Chiang Rai districts if PM2.5 dropped to the WHO guideline:
- Chiang Rai Phan: up to 3.7 years of life expectancy gained
- Chiang Rai Wiang Chai, Khun Tan, Pa Daet, Muang Chiang Rai, Mae Sai: around 3.7 years
- Mae Lao and Phaya Mengrai: about 3.6 years
Across Thailand, the 25 most polluted municipalities cluster in Chiang Rai, Phayao, and Nan. In these places, cleaner air could add more than 3.3 years to a person’s life. Meanwhile, the larger Northern region sees an average life expectancy loss of about 2.7 years, tied to pollution levels that run 18% to 52% above the national average.
Bangkok faces serious pollution, too, but the AQLI estimate is lower. In the capital, people could gain about 1.6 years with air that meets the WHO guideline. The gap shows how intense seasonal haze can be in the north, compared with more steady city pollution.

PM2.5 Explained, and Why It Harms the Body
PM2.5 means particles that are smaller than 2.5 micrometers, about 30 times thinner than a human hair. Because they’re so small, they can move deep into the lungs. From there, they can pass into the bloodstream.
Over time, exposure links to major health problems. These include breathing illness, heart disease, lung cancer, and early death. That’s why PM2.5 often gets labeled an “invisible killer,” since people can breathe it in without noticing until damage builds.
The AQLI turns complex science into a simple measure: years of life lost or gained. It draws on peer-reviewed research that shows a cause-and-effect relationship between long-term PM2.5 exposure and shorter lifespans.
In Thailand, the AQLI comparison is striking. PM2.5 reduces life expectancy more than several other major risks, including:
- Tobacco use (about 1.7 years lost)
- Dietary risks (about 1.2 years lost)
- Transport injuries (about 11.5 months lost)
On the global scale, particulate pollution ranks among the top outside risks to health, close to smoking. The AQLI estimates the world could gain 15.1 billion life years if PM2.5 fell to the WHO guideline.

AQLI Findings Featured at BAQ 2026 in Bangkok
These results took center stage at the 12th Better Air Quality (BAQ) conference, held March 11 to 13, 2026, at the UN Conference Centre in Bangkok. Clean Air Asia organized the event with support from the Asian Development Bank, the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, ESCAP, and UNEP.
The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and Thailand’s Pollution Control Department co-hosted. The theme was “Together for Clear Skies: Driving Action, Accelerating Investment.”
During the conference, speakers stressed the value of tools like the AQLI because they make air pollution easier to understand. When people see “years of life lost,” the issue feels personal, not abstract. That framing can also help push stronger policy and better public support.
Discussions also pointed to practical next steps. Better enforcement came up often. So did stronger monitoring systems and cross-border cooperation, since haze doesn’t stop at national lines.
Thailand has made some progress, including tighter PM2.5 standards in recent years. Still, the 2023 data points in the wrong direction. PM2.5 rose 7% from 2022, and it has increased 15.5% since 1998. Over the long term, the southern region saw the largest jump, with a 46% increase.
What Needs to Happen Next
Health and air quality experts keep calling for action that hits several sources at once. No single fix will solve PM2.5 across Thailand, especially with both urban pollution and seasonal burning.
Common priorities include:
- Tighten rules and enforcement for emissions from vehicles, factories, and open burning
- Grow air quality monitoring, especially in rural areas and across the north
- Increase public awareness, using tools like AQLI, so communities can understand local risk
- Support cleaner technology and farming practices that reduce seasonal fires
- Work with neighbors on regional haze, since cross-border smoke affects northern provinces
One message from BAQ 2026 came through clearly. When air pollution gets translated into years of life lost, people pay attention, and leaders feel pressure to act.
For Thailand, the AQLI reads like both a warning and a map. Cleaner air is possible. It can also return meaningful time to people’s lives, starting with the places that lose the most, including Chiang Rai.
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