A NSW Government website

Community DustWatch

This citizen-science program gathers data about dust storms to monitor wind erosion and help care for land and soils.

 

Dust storms are frequent in Australia and can have a large impact on soil resources, the economy and people.

Dust storms are created by wind erosion. They cause soil and nutrient losses to farmers, degrade natural environments, and damage human health and infrastructure.

The cost of dust storms can be large. In September 2009, dust blown from South Australia and New South Wales into Sydney turned the sky red and created a health hazard. The research article Dust storms – what do they really cost? (CSIRO, 2013) estimates that the storm removed 2.5 million tonnes of soil and directly cost the NSW economy around $300 million. 

Due to the significant impacts of dust storms, we need to gather as much information as we can so we can understand and, ultimately, stop them.

As land condition is a major cause of dust storms, monitoring and understanding dust storms can influence decisions about land management. We coordinate Community DustWatch, a national initiative to monitor dust storms across Australia. The project started in 2002 and is one of Australia's longest-running citizen-science programs.

DustWatch – Reducing soil erosion and soil loss in western New South Wales

Dust storm at Katalpa Station, east of Broken Hill, New South Wales

Data collection

Community volunteers around Australia record data and observations about dust in their local area and send them to the department. We analyse the data and share it with the community, researchers and government agencies such as the NSW Environment Protection Authority, health authorities, the Bureau of Meteorology and NSW Local Land Services.

Submit an observation

Anyone can make an observation and help increase our understanding of wind erosion processes.

Download and complete the DustWatch South-East observation sheet (PDF 16KB).

Email[email protected]

Post: Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, DustWatch Mailbox, PO Box 20, Gunnedah NSW 2380

Air quality monitoring stations

There are close to 40 monitoring stations in southern Australia, worth about $600,000. Community volunteers help maintain the stations and report dust activity in their area. The contribution of the volunteers saves the project about $400,000 a year.



Key:Air quality monitoring station
Displaying 11 - 20 of 38
DPI research centre (NSW 2739)
Private property (NSW 2752)
Corner of Carwarp Rd and Fraser Rd (NSW 3496)
BoM site (NSW 2835)
BoM site (SA 5302)
BoM airport (NSW 2671)
DPI research centre (NSW 2877)
Northern Rivers Aero Club (NSW 2480)
BoM airport (NSW 2836)
Snowy Hydro Discover Centre (NSW 2630)

Download a filterable spreadsheet of NSW air quality monitoring stations (XLSX 44KB).

Live air quality data

Explore our many air quality monitoring stations across the state. Particle concentration data is updated hourly. 

Go to the live data

The value of DustWatch

During a dust storm, the DustWatch team can obtain key information within a few hours and give an early warning of dust to government agencies and the community. In the past, obtaining such information took days.

Community DustWatch has provided a better understanding of the causes and costs of dust storms. This has led natural resource agencies to increase their investment in groundcover projects across Australia and landholders to change how they manage their land.

DustWatch instruments and data have also been used to:

  • test models of wind erosion and dust transport
  • confirm dust storms measured by satellite imagery
  • convert visibility records of the Bureau of Meteorology into dust concentrations.

DustWatch is now the leading source of general and scientific information about wind erosion, dust, groundcover and smoke across Australia.

DustWatch funding

Community DustWatch is funded by:

  • Landcare Australia
  • Riverina, Western, Central West, Central Tablelands and Murray Local Land Services in New South Wales
  • the NSW Environment Protection Authority
  • the Mallee and North Central Catchment Management Authorities in Victoria
  • Murray–Darling Basin Natural Resources Management group in South Australia.

Griffith University in Queensland and the Australian National University in Canberra provide in-kind contributions.