Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Combustion from Gas Stoves Linked to Blood Cancer Risk

by Colleen Fleiss on Jun 18 2023 7:29 PM
Listen to this article
0:00/0:00

Combustion from Gas Stoves Linked to Blood Cancer Risk
A gas cooktop burner on high or a gas oven set to 350 degrees Fahrenheit was found to increase indoor levels of the carcinogen benzene exceeding those in secondhand tobacco smoke. //
Benzene also drifts throughout a home and lingers for hours in home air, according to the paper published in Environmental Science & Technology (1 Trusted Source
Gas and Propane Combustion from Stoves Emits Benzene and Increases Indoor Air Pollution

Go to source
).

“Benzene forms in flames and other high-temperature environments, such as the flares found in oil fields and refineries. We now know that benzene also forms in the flames of gas stoves in our homes,” said study senior author Rob Jackson, the Michelle and Kevin Douglas Provostial Professor and professor of Earth system science at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability. “Good ventilation helps reduce pollutant concentrations, but we found that exhaust fans were often ineffective at eliminating benzene exposure.”

Worse than Secondhand Smoke

They also found residential range hoods are not always effective at reducing concentrations of benzene and other pollutants, even when the hoods vent outdoors.

The new paper is the first to analyze benzene emissions when a stove or oven is in use. Previous studies focused on leaks from stoves when they are off, and did not directly measure resulting benzene concentrations. The researchers found gas and propane burners and ovens emitted 10 to 50 times more benzene than electric stoves. Induction cooktops emitted no detectable benzene whatsoever. The rates of benzene emitted during combustion were hundreds of times higher than benzene emission rates identified in other recent studies from unburned gas leaking into homes.

The researchers also tested whether foods being cooked emit benzene and found zero benzene emissions from pan-frying salmon or bacon. All benzene emissions the investigators measured came from the fuel used rather than any food cooked.

A previous Stanford-led study (2 Trusted Source
Stanford scientists find the climate and health impacts of natural gas stoves are greater than previously thought

Go to source
) showed that gas-burning stoves inside U.S. homes leak methane with a climate impact comparable to the carbon dioxide emissions from about 500,000 gasoline-powered cars. They also expose users to pollutants, such as nitrogen dioxide, which can trigger respiratory diseases. A 2013 meta-analysis (3 Trusted Source
Meta-analysis of the effects of indoor nitrogen dioxide and gas cooking on asthma and wheeze in children

Go to source
) concluded that children who live in homes with gas stoves had a 42% greater risk of asthma than children living in homes without gas stoves, and a 2022 analysis calculated that 12.7% of childhood asthma in the U.S. is attributable to gas stoves (4 Trusted Source
Population Attributable Fraction of Gas Stoves and Childhood Asthma in the United States

Go to source
).

“I’m renting an apartment that happens to have an electric stove,” said study lead Yannai Kashtan, a graduate student in Earth system science. “Before starting this research, I never thought about it twice, but the more we learn about pollution from gas stoves, the more relieved I am to be living without a gas stove.”

Advertisement
References:
  1. Gas and Propane Combustion from Stoves Emits Benzene and Increases Indoor Air Pollution - (https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c09289)
  2. Stanford scientists find the climate and health impacts of natural gas stoves are greater than previously thought - (https://news.stanford.edu/2022/01/27/rethinking-cooking-gas/)
  3. Meta-analysis of the effects of indoor nitrogen dioxide and gas cooking on asthma and wheeze in children - (https://academic.oup.com/ije/article/42/6/1724/737113?)
  4. Population Attributable Fraction of Gas Stoves and Childhood Asthma in the United States - (https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/20/1/75)

Source-Eurekalert


Advertisement