From the ‘those are fighting words’ department and the UNIVERSITY OF SURREY. Just wait until they get a load of the “coal fired pizza” in Texas.
The pizza slice that comes at a price
Scientific report announces emerging risk caused by wood burning stoves in pizza restaurants and charcoal in steakhouses to the environment
A recent study has shown that emissions in major cities caused by restaurants such as pizzerias and steakhouses using wood burners can be damaging to the urban environment.
The findings published in the journalAtmospheric Environment points out the underlining pollution causes of the Latin American city of Sao Paulo in Brazil. This work is a collaborative effort by ten leading air pollution experts from seven universities, led by the University of Surrey’s Dr Prashant Kumar from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, under the umbrella of University Global Partnership Network (UGPN).
The Latin American megacity of São Paulo is the only megacity worldwide that uses a much cleaner bio-fuel driven fleet. With about 10% of Brazil’s total population, Sao Paulo’s inhabitants fill their vehicles with a biofuel comprising of sugarcane ethanol, gasohol (75% gasoline and 25% ethanol) and soya diesel.
Dr Kumar said: “It became evident from our work that despite there not being the same high level of pollutants from vehicles in the city as other megacities, there had not been much consideration of some of the unaccounted sources of emissions. These include wood burning in thousands of pizza shops or domestic waste burning.”
Despite feijoada (a pork and bean stew) being the often hailed Brazil’s national dish, pizza is revered by the residents of Sao Paulo. The ‘pizza day’ is celebrated every July and the neighbourhood pizzeria is the Sunday dinner with the family venue for most of the city’s residents. People of all ages line up for hours outside pizzerias every Sunday evening and the city is home to around 8,000 pizza parlours that produce close to a million pizzas a day and can seat up to around 600 people a time. In addition to the 800 pizzas a day being made using old-fashioned wood burning stoves, a further 1,000 a day are produced for home delivery, with Sunday being the busiest day of the week.
Dr Kumar continued, “There are more than 7.5 hectares of Eucalyptus forest being burned every month by pizzerias and steakhouses. A total of over 307,000 tonnes of wood is burned each year in pizzerias. This is significant enough of a threat to be of real concern to the environment negating the positive effect on the environment that compulsory green biofuel policy has on vehicles.”
Co-author Prof Maria de Fatima from the University of Sao Paulo added, “Although the huge number of passenger vehicles and diesel trucks are the dominant contributor to particle emissions, at least we understand the impact that this is having on the environment and can factor in solutions. The important contributions to particle emissions gained from burning of wood and the seasonal burning of sugar cane plantations need to be accounted in future studies as they are also significant contributors as a pollutant.”

Additional co-author Prof Yang Zhang from the North Carolina State University explained, “Once in the air, the emitted pollutants can undergo complex physical and chemical processes to form harmful secondary pollutants such as ozone and secondary aerosol. While most studies in Brazil have focused on impacts of vehicle emissions on air quality and human health, the impacts of emissions from wood/coal burning and meat-cooking in pizzerias and restaurants are yet to be quantified”
In addition, another part of the problem is the impact of the neighbouring Amazon rainforest. Biomass burning from the south southern edge of the forest can be transported across the Atlantic coast to Brazil and had to be included in the qualitative assessments of the city air pollution.
Citing this recent work, Dr Kumar, continued: “We believe that the contents of this new direction article provide an unprecedented approach in examining the adverse impact of air pollution in such a unique megacity as São Paulo.”
Professor Vince Emery, Senior Vice-President of Global Strategy and Engagement, University of Surrey commented: “This is another excellent example of how global challenges such as air pollution in cities need global networks to identify the problems and ultimately create innovative solutions”.
Paul Smith, Associate Dean in the Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, University of Surrey added “It is great to see that the seed funding invested by UGPN partners has facilitated internationally co-authored work in such an important research area”.
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Oh dear! If it had been anything other than wood-fired pizza…
These researchers are holding a jar of nitroglycerin while running a jackhammer. They should know better than to go after pizza ovens. They should drop this research and very quietly go on to something else.
And yet the Loony Green Meanies in Britain have replaced coal-fired power plants with American wood-burning facilities. Crazy, man!
Wood contains relatively more carbon than coal, coal more than oil and oil more than natural gas. Which is why the US switch to gas power has cut our carbon emissions more than called for by the idiotic Kyoto Accords. As the carbon content declines, the hydrogen content increases.
Well I’m going to go against the grain, if such activities are fairly common then it is quite possibly a significant cause of pollution in this city. Fashionable wood burners/stoves in the UK are already having an impact on air quality in winter – responsible for 10% of air pollution in London. And on the continent domestic coal/wood burning (more for economics than fashion) really is causing more and more serious air pollution – Kraków probably the worst case. It’s almost like we are going backwards.
We should recognize that the left wants EVERYONE to be guilty of something.
That is why the number of our laws pile up. When everyone is guilty then everyone lives in fear of that knock on the door — that subpoena in the mail. Whimper a protest and the government “legally” descends “about something”.
For the greens to have control everyone must be guilty of green crimes so every damn thing must be a green crime. Its an old leftist tactic.
Eugene WR Gallun
How right you are. I didn’t want you to get into any trouble, so I redacted all of the illegal words in your comment. I let one iffy word stand but it does depend on what the meaning of “is” is.
Actually this is a good thing. If one of their concerns is the release of carbon dioxide, we need to encourage them to study the harmful effect of a population over 4 million routinely drinking carbonated beverages, including beer, and ask for a comparison to the CO produced by pizza ovens.
We also should demand that the research include the burning of candles. There are over three million Catholics in San Paula. That means a lot of Catholic churches, which further implies a lot of candles being burned daily. How much pollution are they contributing?
Once people realize that their entire culture could be questioned, we can sit back and watch others do the fighting.
First they tried to target the poor old cows farting methane and now the Idle Hands of the Devil have moved on to denounce wood-fired Pizzas. I feel like going out buying a steak and loading it onto a wood-fired pizza just to punish these lunatics.
In the real world, these people would be assessed and sedated and locked away.
‘Professor Vince Emery, Senior Vice-President of Global Strategy and … commented: “This is another … example of how global challenges such as air pollution … need global networks to identify the problems and … create innovative solutions”.
‘Paul Smith, Associate Dean … added “It is great to see that the seed funding invested by UGPN partners has facilitated internationally co-authored work in such an important research area”.’
In two paragraphs we have “global” repeated three times and “internationally” once. Over wood fired pizzas in one So. American city?
Global (see, they’ve got me doing it too) governance … on steroids? Help!!!
Will this insanity ever end without a revolution. Man the barricades against the Bureaucrats, the Faux Scientists, the Modelers, the Politicians, the Green Totalitarians and all the rest of the know it all’s and do- gooders who seek to stuff their BS down our gullets for the good of the “earth”.
in one aspect they make sense, but what makes me to laugh it away is that now, as prices for fuel are soaring, and people use their stoves again they come with this “garbage”
so it is more a try to block people from a cheap heating source then to really make sense.
wood fires are polluting, in a big city this can be problematic if done on a massive scale, but in the end the amount of houses with wood fires vs industry, cars,… is so low that it can be neglected. i call this “going for the small bit in order to ignore the real big city issues….
Burning wood is okay by the warmists. The huge Drax coal fired station in UK switched to South Carolina hardwood because it’s renewable!!! We burn food crops in our cars and trucks. How stupid is all that. Maybe if Drax went into the pizza business using waste heat from wood firing they could turn a decent profit without huge subsidies.
Sounds like a few lads figured out how get a paid trip to the Olympics…
Hey, maybe order a wood baked pizza on your way to a Texas coal roller derby…
(coal rolling is intentionally disabling the combustion monitors on a diesel engine so as to dump rich fuel into the combustion process…)
environ mental illness – wait:
they really search pizzarias for the clue that saves the World.
_______________________
Tired of lying in the sunshine staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today
And then one day you find ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun
Read about the Guildford grotesques.
http://www.surrey.ac.uk/search?query=Dr%20Prashant%20Kumar%20
According to the University of Surrey’s Dr Kumar [as quoted] 307, 000 tonnes of wood is burned in pizzerias east year to produce 800 pizzas/day in restaurants and 1000 pizzas/day delivered]……a yearly total of 657,000 pizzas. That compares with Sao Paulo’s annual pizza production of about 365,000,000.
So the wood fired pizzas amount 0.18% of annual production. That certainly is an emerging risk. At that level it couldn’t be anything but “emerging” as it barely exists.
They could probably use better ovens though……..according to those figures it takes 478kg of wood to cook a pizza
If they come after my mesquite barbecue I’m gonna have to sic the dogs on ’em.
Apparently they have changed their ‘minds’ on renewables.
wood lol
First it is “Split wood, not atoms”, now it is, “Don’t split anything except hairs”. When I first saw the title of this article, I thought it was a spoof. Well, at least the environmentalist movement is keeping us entertained.
Brazil uses foodstuffs to fuel their cars. People are hungry. Nothing could be more evil.