A health hazard?
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Barbecues poison the air with toxins and could
cause cancer, research suggests.
A study by the French environmental campaigning group Robin des
Bois found that a typical two-hour barbecue can release the same
level of dioxins as up to 220,000 cigarettes.
Dioxins are a group of chemicals known to increase the likelihood
of cancer.
The figures were based on grilling four large steaks, four turkey
cuts and eight large sausages.
This amount of cooking was found to release 12-22 nannograms of
dioxins into the atmosphere.
The researchers also found that the average concentrations of
dioxins in the vicinity of the barbecue ranged from 0.6 to 0.7
nannograms per cubic metre - up to seven times higher than the level
authorised for public incinerators at the point of discharge from
the chimney.
Food
The French food safety agency is also undertaking research into
the possible cancer-causing effect of carbonising food during the
barbecuing process.
They have found that some hydrocarbons which have been linked to
cancer are incorporated into the food.
Desmond Hammerton, a retired professor of Marine Biology, is
campaigning to raise awareness of the problem.
He called for warnings to be included on barbecue equipment.
He said: "I'm sure that just the odd barbecue during the summer
is not going to have any effect.
"But if you have a barbecue once or twice a week through the
summer, and all crowd round it and inhale the fumes then over 10 or
20 years maybe that would do something."
Research published by the Food Standards Agency shows that the
average intake of dioxins and dioxin-like chemicals called PCBs in
the diet has fallen by 50% between 1997 and 2001. |