Skip to main content

Airly cleans up with $5.5m funding

Air quality platform provides data infrastructure to allow cities to reduce pollutants
By Adam Hill November 18, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
Airly says impact studies prove that cities with a dense network of air quality sensors are achieving faster reduction in air pollution

Airly has secured a new $5.5m funding round for its air quality platform, and has now raised $8.8m from investors since March 2021.

More than 10 million people die each year from air pollution, and the World Health Organisation has tightened up on safe levels of air pollutants.

Recently, Airly launched the largest air quality monitoring network in a European city by installing 165 sensors in Warsaw.

It also has deployments in the UK (Birmingham and the London boroughs of Lambeth, Haringey and soon Southwark) and Indonesia (Jakarta).

The Airly platform provides solutions for air quality monitoring to local governments, companies and local communities in over 40 countries.

Airly says it will now be able to provide a complete dashboard, including a report generator, impact tracker and city ranking, allowing users to monitor the data and obtain actionable insights that will translate into effective actions to improve air quality and understand their impact on health and well-being.

The funding round was led by Firstminute Capital and Pi Labs with participation from existing investors including Sir Richard Branson Family Office, AENU, Untitled and new investors including Slack co-founder Cal Henderson, Snowflake co-founder Marcin Zukowski as well as institutional investors Semapa Next and TO Ventures. 

“With the funding round we are going deeper with our users," says Airly CEO and co-founder Wiktor Warchałowski.

"Monitoring with our sensors has helped bring the issue to the surface and now with our dashboard offering actionable insights and nudges, we believe this will be the catalyst that helps move measures and policies into place to repair the air we breathe.” 

Airly says impact studies prove that cities with a dense network of air quality sensors are achieving faster reduction in air pollution.

It says that, since 2019, four cities from the C40 group (a global network of cities taking urgent action to confront the climate crisis) with dense monitoring networks (Jakarta, Lisbon, London and Warsaw) have improved their overall air quality by 16% (compared to 5% improvement made by cities without dense networks).
 
“Trailblazers in London are showing how real-time local air quality data is the catalyst for taking action to make our urban spaces healthier and more sustainable," says Brent Hoberman, executive chairman of Founders Forum and Firstminute.

"I expect many cities and local authorities to follow their leadership, starting with more precise and local data. Airly is at the forefront of building this data infrastructure."
  
Stefania Ponzo, Partner at Pi Labs, says: "We believe Airly’s solution will become an essential tool in cities around the world, helping to improve liveability standards, reduce emissions, and ultimately, getting us closer to sustainability and wellness goals."

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Intertraffic Amsterdam 2024: Smart, safe & sustainable mobility for all
    April 4, 2024
    Intertraffic Amsterdam 2024 is the place where the movers and shakers of the global ITS industry will gather from 16-19 April. With emphasis on climate, artificial intelligence – and even drones – this edition has something for everyone in the transportation sector…
  • Umovity and Derq: A potent combination
    April 25, 2024
    Umovity and Derq announced their first joint solution at the 2024 ITS America Conference, combining Derq’s INSIGHT, the company’s automated safety performance monitoring application, with Econolite’s cloud-based Advanced Transportation Management System (ATMS), Centracs Mobility.
  • Strike action prompts commuters to try something different
    June 2, 2014
    David Crawford highlights responses to transit disruption on both sides of the Atlantic. Shortly before workers at San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) began a lengthy round of pay and conditions-related strikes in summer 2013, impacting on the daily lives of 400,000 communities, online ridesharing group Avego publicised a new web address: bartstrike.com. By the start of the following week, Avego was encouraging stranded commuters to download its smartphone app by offering them the chance in a raffle
  • ICE State of the Nation report ‘makes grim reading’ says expert
    June 27, 2014
    The UK’s Institution of Civil Engineers has issued its 2014 State of the Nation: Infrastructure report, which focuses on the performance, capacity and condition of the UK's key economic infrastructure networks. The report finds that the UK approach to delivering and maintaining infrastructure requires attention and recommends that progress made to date should be built upon to ensure that the UK possesses world class infrastructure. It also finds that three sectors – energy, flood management and local tra