Ozone and PM2.5 Air Quality Index (AQI) Forecast

Issued: Friday, March 20, 2026, 2:32 PM

Friday and Saturday, sunshine and warm temperatures each day will promote ozone production. In addition, as surface high pressure persists over the northern Gulf, periods of light southwesterly winds will limit dispersion, and smoke from localized agricultural fires may contribute to particle concentrations. However, winds will strengthen slightly each afternoon, increasing dispersion and leading to high-Good to low-Moderate AQI levels on both days. Sunday, as a cold front approaches from the northwest, moderate south-southwesterly winds will disperse pollutants in Louisiana. However, mostly sunny skies and warm temperatures will continue to support ozone formation, yielding high-Good AQI levels in most cities.

Baton Rouge

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 67 - Moderate 61 - Moderate 50 - Good
PM25 39 - Good 44 - Good 39 - Good

Alexandria

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 46 - Good 44 - Good 43 - Good
PM25 44 - Good 39 - Good 33 - Good

Lake Charles

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 48 - Good 46 - Good 44 - Good
PM25 33 - Good 44 - Good 39 - Good

Lafayette

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 49 - Good 48 - Good 44 - Good
PM25 33 - Good 44 - Good 33 - Good

Monroe

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 42 - Good 42 - Good 40 - Good
PM25 50 - Good 44 - Good 39 - Good

New Orleans

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 54 - Moderate 49 - Good 44 - Good
PM25 44 - Good 50 - Good 39 - Good

Shreveport

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 48 - Good 49 - Good 44 - Good
PM25 53 - Moderate 50 - Good 44 - Good

Thibodaux

Friday Saturday Sunday
Ozone 48 - Good 46 - Good 44 - Good
PM25 33 - Good 44 - Good 33 - Good

More Information About Understanding AQI Information

The AQI is an index for reporting daily air quality. It tells you how clean or unhealthy your air is, and what associated health effects might be a concern. The AQI focuses on health effects you may experience within a few hours or days after breathing unhealthy air. The following chart provides information regarding the AQI determinations:

Category AQI Value What This Means
Good 0-50 Air quality is considered satisfactory, and air pollution poses little or no risk.
Moderate 51-100 Air quality is acceptable; however, for some pollutants there may be a moderate health concern for a very small number of people who are unusually sensitive to air pollution.
Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups 101-150 Members of sensitive groups may experience health effects. The general public is not likely to be affected.
Unhealthy 151-200 Everyone may begin to experience health effects; members of sensitive groups may experience more serious health effects.
Very Unhealthy 201-300 Health warnings of emergency conditions. The entire population is more likely to be affected.
Hazardous 301-500 Health alert: everyone may experience more serious health effects.

Any questions about interpreting this monitoring data should be directed to the DEQ Customer Services Section at 1-866-896-5337.

TO REPORT ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS, INCLUDING ODORS, CONTACT THE DEQ SINGLE POINT OF CONTACT (SPOC) - 225-219-3640 or Toll Free 1-888-763-5424. In the event of an environmental emergency, citizens are encouraged to first contact their local authorities - police, sheriff, fire department, etc. Otherwise citizens and the regulated community can contact the SPOC line to report environmental concerns during business hours, 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday at the number listed above. To report a concern outside of business hours call 225-342-1234 or the toll free number. Concerns include spills, releases, odors, fish kills, open burning, waste tires and any other types of environmental incidents. Citizens can report the incident online.

The data has not been quality reviewed or validated. Continuous PM2.5 readings shown are not NAAQS comparable.