A recent study by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has revealed that cooking-related activities contribute significantly to air pollution. The study, which focused on urban areas including Las Vegas, found that nearly 25% of human-caused air pollutants in these regions originate from cooking sources such as restaurants, food trucks, and street vendors. The findings indicate that the enticing aromas associated with cooking may actually be degrading air quality.
Smell Of Cooking Food Is Possibly Polluting The Air You Breathe, Finds Study https://t.co/tdwfzLkTmF https://t.co/pNXDjmTnb2
🚨STUDY: COOKING IS POLLUTING THE AIR?! Smell that delicious aroma? It might just be adding to the pollution! A new study reveals that nearly 25% of human-caused air pollutants in urban areas come from cooking. On the bustling Las Vegas Strip, NOAA researchers found that… https://t.co/PfnVqhEx02
The smell of cooking food is actually air pollution, study finds https://t.co/2QBIHJYkmN
That mouth-watering aroma of fresh food cooking? It may be degrading air quality https://t.co/2ZMbmcHS9M
It’s hard to resist the delicious smell of food cooking at restaurants, food trucks and street vendors. However, a new government study focused on three cities including Las Vegas suggests those aromas may be negatively impacting air quality. https://t.co/T3b3YXOUQn
Cooking-related air pollution is vastly underestimated, NOAA study finds https://t.co/TanFJ0xLUz