San Joaquin Valley Air District

04/21/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/21/2026 10:22

Valley Air District Releases 2025 Annual Report to the Community

For immediate release
04/21/2026

Attn:
Local news, weather, health and assignment editors

Media Contact:
Jaime Holt (559) 309-3336

Spanish-language Contact:
Maricela Velásquez (559) 708-7087

Valley Air District Releases 2025 Annual Report to the Community

Report Highlights Valley Clean Air Milestones in 2025, Continued Efforts Ahead

The Valley Air District has released its 2025 Annual Report to the Community, now available to the public. The report provides Valley residents with a concise and easy-to-follow recap of the District's goals, objectives, operations, and actions in the preceding year. As detailed in the report, in 2025, the San Joaquin Valley experienced record clean air improvements across a number of key metrics, reflecting decades of collective effort by residents, businesses, farmers, public agencies, and community organizations. Recognizing this progress is essential to not only demonstrate that decades of investment and collaborative effort are delivering real, measurable results, but to also reinforce the importance of continued funding, innovation and partnership as the Valley works to meet increasingly stringent federal air quality standards.

"Based on air monitoring data collected throughout the region, 2025 was the cleanest year on record across numerous air quality metrics. For the first time, every federal reference monitoring site recorded levels below the federal 24-hour PM2.5 standard. At the same time, we continued to make meaningful progress in reducing ozone concentrations with the lowest number of exceedances of ozone standards on record. Overall, the Valley continued to have more "Good" air quality days, and a record low number of only five "Unhealthy" days across all Valley counties, down from over 100 days just ten years ago, and hundreds of days twenty years ago. These improvements bring the Valley closer than ever to attaining the remaining federal health-based standards, and represents real improvements in the air we breathe and tangible health benefits for the communities we serve," stated by Samir Sheikh, Valley Air District Executive Director/APCO, in the opening of the Annual Report.

This progress is driven in part by the Valley's investments in clean air programs, including Valley Air District incentives for cleaner vehicles and equipment, community-based initiatives, and ongoing regulatory efforts.

"While 2025 marks a significant achievement, our work is far from over," said Tulare County Supervisor and Valley Air District Governing Board Chair Amy Shuklian. "We remain committed to advancing innovative solutions, strengthening partnerships, and continuing to improve air quality and public health for all Valley residents."

Despite this progress, additional efforts are needed to meet all of the federal air quality standards. The District, in partnership with the California Air Resources Board, the federal EPA and Valley stakeholders, will continue advancing strategies to further reduce emissions and protect public health.

The Annual Report is accessible online at valleyair.org. Free printed copies can be ordered by emailing [email protected] or calling (559) 230-6000.

The Valley Air District covers eight counties including San Joaquin, Stanislaus, Merced, Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare and San Joaquin Valley air basin portions of Kern. For additional information about the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District, visit www.valleyair.org or call 559-230-6000.

San Joaquin Valley Air District published this content on April 21, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 21, 2026 at 16:23 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]