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The Reason to Houston's Fattest City Title?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Rockets34Legend, Mar 18, 2003.

  1. Rockets34Legend

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    http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/articles/0317bbqs-haze-ON.html

    Barbecues' fatty fumes add to Houston's haze
    Dina Cappiello
    Houston Chronicle
    Mar. 17, 2003 08:05 AM

    HOUSTON, Texas - When folks say Texans live and breathe barbecue, they really mean it.

    In a study about to be published, scientists at Rice University have measured the tiny bits of polyunsaturated fatty acids created by cooking meat. These fine particles - mixed with the diesel exhaust, car fumes and road dust that make up soot in Houston's air - can lodge in people's lungs and contribute to the city's haze.

    But while Houstonians have long joked about the "smell of money" emanating from the Ship Channel, barbecue enthusiasts don't see the humor in scientists' measuring the "fatty fumes" that are a byproduct of a favorite pastime.

    "There are a lot of people who have grills at their house," said Jeff Shivers, executive director of the Texas Barbecue Association. "It's not like everybody is firing them up at the same time. There is so much other stuff in the area."

    Analyzing particles in Houston's air, environmental engineer Matt Fraser of Rice University detected fatty acids among the millions of tiny organic particles that float in the city's atmosphere. The acids are released when fat drips onto hot coals and sizzles.

    "It's definitely when you have an open grill. It's any process that generates meat smoke," said Fraser, whose study was recently accepted for publication in the journal Atmospheric Environment. "The compounds are specific to meat."

    Come December 2004, fine particles may be subject to increased regulation in Texas if it is found that metropolitan areas such as Houston do not meet federal air quality standards for particulate matter - what scientists call the mix of particles in the air. The area already exceeds federal guidelines for smog, and has until 2007 to come into compliance.

    Research like Fraser's could be used by the state to determine which sources to eventually control.

    These meaty particles - a fraction of the width of a human hair - are what you smell when you drive by a Burger King, steak house or barbecue joint. They are among dozens of particles, from cigarette smoke to tire wear, even cholesterol, that scientists can detect in the air using unique molecular fingerprints.

    The only possible source of polyunsaturated fatty acids is meat cooking, according to laboratory tests. Scientists use other one-of-a-kind compounds to trace other pollution sources.

    Fraser's analysis excluded inorganic particles, released by industry and large-scale combustion that comprise the bulk of particles in Houston's air.

    "That just blows me away, because we are going to be a pollutant," said Sandy Babcock, treasurer of the Texas Gulf Coast Barbecue Association. "You think mold, tree spores but not meat particles."

    Indeed, any suggestion that meat smoke could be a part of the hazardous particle mix is treated as downright un-Texan. Babcock's association, for example, boasts that the Lone Star state holds more than 400 competitive barbecue events every year. The organization's motto is, "Texans are born with a mission to go out and educate people about barbecue."

    But Fraser isn't blaming the backyard cookout for Houston's pollution problem.

    "Meat cooking is more important than wood burning, but it's less important than diesel," Fraser said. "These are trace levels. They are very low concentrations."

    Fraser analyzed air samples taken from four locations between March 1997 and February 1998 for eight different sources of organic particles. Two samples were located near the heavily industrialized Houston Ship Channel. One, more representative of a suburban area, was on Bingle Road. For comparison, a fourth monitor was placed at the Galveston airport.

    He found fatty particles from grilling meat in all areas. Proportionately, meat cooking was the biggest contributor only in Galveston, though the island had the lowest concentration of organic particles overall.

    But unlike some of the other sources of organic particles studied - including fuel oil, diesel- and gasoline-powered engines, road dusts and the waxes released by dead plants as they are run over - the proportion of particles from meat cooking was constant regardless of season.

    Similar air studies in Atlanta and Los Angeles have also found evidence of meat cooking. In health-conscious California, a 1996 study found fatty acids accounted for a greater percentage of the particles there than in Houston.

    "There may be some difference in how many people eat meat or something, but it's really the density" of the city that determines the concentration of particles, Fraser explained.

    In California, the research prompted officials to require fast-food restaurants that use chain-driven charbroilers to install ceramic filters on their exhaust vents. To meet ozone and small particle air standards by 2010, the state is considering more rigorous rules for restaurants.

    "It's just part of our ongoing process here in the smog capital of the U.S. of having to go to every source of air pollution and making them do their fair share," said Sam Atwood, a spokesman for the South Coast Air Quality Management District in Southern California.

    In Maryland, air permits have been required for industrial-size charbroilers and barbecue pits since 1984, said John Scherer, a public health engineer with the Maryland Department of the Environment.

    A search of the Harris County database for air pollution complaints found none related to restaurants, barbecue or grilling.

    Regardless, it's tough to imagine much political support for cracking down on grilling in what might be the barbecue capital of the world.
     
  2. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    that's it...time to regulate BBQ!!!

    PETA is gonna have a field day with this!
     
  3. A-Train

    A-Train Member

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    I will put a bullet through the back of my head before I give up BBQ...
     
  4. Supermac34

    Supermac34 President, Von Wafer Fan Club

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    The EPA is going to put a speed limit on the cooking of meat.

    Only slow cooked meat at 55 links per day...that way we'll lower meat cooking emissions. Cooking 70 links per day pollutes way too much.:)
     
  5. El_Conquistador

    El_Conquistador King of the D&D, The Legend, #1 Ranking

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    It's only a matter of time before someone starts complaining about their asthmatic nephew who coughs when he is outside in Houston. Let's all blame all of our respiratory problems on George Foreman and those silly grills. We need "breathable" air so let's ban all cars, refineries, power plants, industrial manufacturing plants and grills.
     
  6. Pole

    Pole Lies, damn lies, stats, and peer reviewed studies
    Supporting Member

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    I'll put down my big spatula when you pry my cold dead fingers from it.
     
  7. heypartner

    heypartner Member

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    Those "Rice Scientists" are geeks from the North, no doubt.
     
  8. rrj_gamz

    rrj_gamz Member

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    Fat is Good...

    BBQ is the reason I live...

    Besides, my pit is the best and I cook a mean brisket...I may have contributed last weekend...
     
  9. Rockets2K

    Rockets2K Clutch Crew

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    Well then, does my smoker count? cause with the offset firebox..none of the meat fat drips on the hot coals.

    I'll listen to them complain about the pollution caused by BBqing right after they finally make the industries comply with the Clean Air act.
    I cant tell you how many days I walk outside to particular pollution from Exxon on my car and the stench of rotten eggs from their petroleum processing units in the air. Yet, when it came time to figure out how to get rid of some of the pollution in the air, Exxon and all the other large companies got "grandfathered" when it came to complying with the government regulations. :mad:
    Instead, it must be our fault...after all, we all drive too much and BBQ too much and cut out yards too much with those mass polluters known as 2 cycle engines. Yea right...how bout all the soot blown out the exhaust of the deisel trucks that I have to weave in and out of on the roads every day...how bout all them damn ****-kickers in their massive dually deisels that try to run me over every day??...Am I the only one that sees all the crap coming out of their tailpipes??

    Geez...damn government sucks.
     

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