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A Skytrain travels past the downtown Vancouver skyline, on Oct. 22, 2018.DARRYL DYCK/The Globe and Mail

Air quality in Metro Vancouver has been improving over the past decade, despite an unprecedented number of days that were under air quality advisories in 2017 and ’18.

A report from Metro Vancouver shows contaminant levels have improved at monitoring stations located from Horseshoe Bay to Hope.

The regional district issued no air quality advisories last year, unlike the wildfire seasons of 2017 and ’18 when smoke blanketed many parts of the province.

The report says sulphur dioxide levels continued to improve, mainly because of strict lower sulphur requirements for marine fuels.

It says average levels of ground-level ozone in the area have increased slightly despite reductions in the pollutants that cause it, partly because of an increase in ozone coming from outside Canada.

Vancouver Councillor Adriane Carr, who’s also the chairwoman of the district’s climate action committee, says Metro Vancouver’s plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions would see the district become carbon neutral by 2050.

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