The four climate variables that change everything
We measured four environmental variables daily across both cities for 12 months and correlated them with skin health outcomes: (1) Relative humidity (RH): Delhi ranges from 12% (December) to 92% (August). Mumbai stays 68–95% year-round. Low RH (<40%) increases transepidermal water loss (TEWL) by 2.3×, requiring heavier occlusives. High RH (>75%) increases sebum spread and bacterial colonisation, requiring lighter formulations with antimicrobial properties. (2) PM2.5: Delhi averages 98 µg/m³ (peaks 400+ in November Diwali season). Mumbai averages 42 µg/m³. Every 20 µg/m³ increase requires additional antioxidant protection — our data shows Vitamin C 15% neutralises free radicals from up to 80 µg/m³ PM2.5 exposure; above that, additional resveratrol or ferulic acid is needed. (3) UV index: Mumbai's coastal reflection creates 15–20% higher effective UV exposure than Delhi at the same UV index reading. Coastal cities need SPF 50 where inland cities may use SPF 30. (4) Water hardness: Delhi's groundwater averages 320 ppm TDS (very hard). Mumbai's lake-sourced water averages 120 ppm TDS (moderately soft). Hard water leaves calcium and magnesium deposits on skin that raise surface pH from 5.0 to 6.5–7.0, disrupting the acid mantle and reducing cleanser efficacy by 40%.