Poor ventilation and polluting cooking fuels in low-income homes cause high exposure, yet relevant global studies are limited. This study assessed exposure to in-kitchen particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10) using similar instrumentation in 60 low-income homes across 12 cities in Asia, Latin America and Africa in Dhaka, Chennai, Nanjing, Medellín, São Paulo, Cairo, Sulaymaniyah, Addis Ababa, Akure, Blantyre, Dar-es-Salaam and Nairobi.
Exposure profiles of kitchen occupants showed that fuel, kitchen volume, cooking type and ventilation were the most prominent factors affecting in-kitchen exposure. The study found that different cuisines resulted in varying cooking durations and therefore, disproportional exposures. Occupants in Dhaka, Nanjing, Dar-es-Salaam and Nairobi spent > 40% of their cooking time frying, which is the highest particle emitting cooking activity, compared with ∼ 68% of time spent boiling or stewing in Cairo, Sulaymaniyah and Akure.
The highest average PM2.5 (PM10) concentrations were in Dhaka 185 ± 48 (220 ± 58) μg m−3 owing to small kitchens, extensive frying and prolonged cooking compared with the lowest in Medellín 10 ± 3 (14 ± 2) μg m−3. Having dual ventilation, both mechanical and natural in Chennai, Cairo and Sulaymaniyah reduced average in-kitchen PM2.5 and PM10 by 2.3- and 1.8-times compared with natural ventilation in the form of open doors in Addis Ababa, Dar-es-Salam and Nairobi. Using charcoal during cooking in Addis Ababa, Blantyre and Nairobi increased PM2.5 levels by 1.3- and 3.1-times compared with using natural gas in Nanjing, Medellín and Cairo, and LPG in Chennai, São Paulo and Sulaymaniyah, respectively. Smaller kitchens (<15 m3; Dhaka and Nanjing) increased cooking exposure compared with their larger counterparts (Medellin, Cairo and Sulaymaniyah).
Potential exposure doses were highest for Asian, followed by African, Middle-eastern and South American homes. The study recommends increased cooking exhaust extraction, cleaner fuels, awareness on improved cooking practices and minimising passive occupancy in kitchens to mitigate harmful cooking emissions.
Design and development by Soapbox.