Healthy Indoors Magazine - USA Edition

HI September 2022 - USA Edition

Healthy Indoors Magazine

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44 | September 2022 T he case against using nat- ural gas to fuel home appli- ances just got stronger. Researchers at Harvard's Center for Climate, Health and the Global Environment (C-Change) have found that natural gas used in home stoves contains "at least 21 hazard- ous air pollutants that may impact air quality and health." Among the pol- lutants identified in the study, titled "Home is Where the Pipeline Ends," are benzene and toluene. Long-term exposure to high levels of benzene can cause cancer. Mild exposure to toluene vapors even in small amounts may cause headache, dizziness, drowsiness or nausea, while more ex- tensive exposure can lead to irregular heartbeat and even death, says the Centers for Disease Control. The pollutants were detected in unburned natural gas samples from 69 unique kitchen stoves and build- ing pipelines across Greater Boston between December 2019 and May 2021. That the samples came from unburned gas is notable because a Stanford study recently found that leaks from stoves not being used are much higher than expected. In fact, the Stanford researchers found that gas stoves leak more gas when not in use, or when getting turned on or off than when they're in use. Natural gas has raised red flags even before these stove studies were conducted because it consists mainly of methane, a potent greenhouse gas that is 84 times more damaging to the climate than carbon dioxide over time. Now this so-called "clean" fuel is also coming under fire because it is poten- tially so toxic to indoor air. Gas Stoves: "Home is Where the Pipeline Ends" By Diane MacEachern "It is well-established that natu- ral gas is a major source of methane that's driving climate change," said Drew Michanowicz, visiting scientist at Harvard Chan C-CHANGE and senior scientist at PSE Healthy Energy. "But most people haven't really considered that our homes are where the pipeline ends and that when natural gas leaks it can contain health-damaging air pollut- ants in addition to climate pollutants." The researchers also warned that the leaks that are occurring aren't being detected day-to-day because they're usually too small to smell. That doesn't make them less dangerous, which is why scientists recommend that natural gas distributors add a stronger "odorant" to the gas so more leaks can be detected sooner. Addi- tionally, the study's authors note that requiring gas utility providers and state

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