 Global air travel has increased tremendously in the last decade with easier domestic and intercontinental travel. According to the World Bank, around 4 billion passengers globally traveled through airplanes. How does the aviation industry significantly contribute to air pollution, directly and indirectly? Activities like the construction of airports, taxiing, landings and take-offs, constant vehicular activities caused by taxis, buses, and private vehicles, etc. contribute to the air pollution. Fugitive dust emissions are caused due to dust storms or long-distance dust dispersions. Severely deteriorated air quality reduces visibility, causes various pulmonary diseases and affects the physical and mental health of the nearby citizens. The most common pollutants are carbon monoxide, unburnt hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and secondary pollutants such as ground-level ozone and smog. A network of ambient air monitoring devices such as Oizom's Pelludrone is deployed at the runways and periphery of the airport to continuously monitor the concerned pollutants. Warnings can be issued through display screens and mobile alerts about poor air quality. Visibility monitoring through particulate monitoring integrated with weather data, measured by Oizom's weather commensures safer landings and take-offs. The airport is turned into a, smart and efficient airport, through automated indoor air ventilation, automated dust suppressors, road surface conditions, etc. Airport air quality monitoring for smart airports leads to a sustainable pollution-free future. To read in detail about how effective the solution is, click on the link in the description below.