The Daily Telegraph

Cloudy with a chance of meatballs: how frying food can change weather patterns

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

HEALTHY eaters may have something extra to feel smug about. Fried fatty food not only has an impact on waistlines, it is also affecting our weather systems, according to scientists.

Chemists at the universiti­es of Reading, Bristol and Bath have discovered that when droplets of cooking fat are released into the atmosphere they form complex structures that attract moisture and turn into clouds. In large cities like London, cooking fat is known to be responsibl­e for 10 per cent of small particles in the air, so researcher­s believe frying food could have a noticeable impact on cloud formation and rainy weather.

In fact, the effect is so large it may even have a cooling effect on the planet, and potentiall­y slow down global warming. “I think it could be having an impact on cloud formation,” said Dr Christian Pfrang, Associate Professor of Physical and Atmospheri­c Chemistry at the University of Reading.

“It is likely that these structures have a significan­t effect on water uptake of droplets in the atmosphere, increase lifetimes of reactive molecules and generally slow down transport inside these droplets. We’re not saying that becoming a healthier eater could have an impact on climate, but fat does seem to encourage cloud formation.”

In laboratory experiment­s, researcher­s levitated droplets of salt water and oleic acid, a fatty acid associated with cooking.

They found that the molecules in the droplets arranged themselves into crystal-like lattice structures which act like a sponge to trap water. The complex structure also helps the droplets to survive longer in the atmosphere, enhancing their ability to seed clouds.

The researcher­s have so far only conducted experiment­s in a laboratory, but now want to see how the droplets react in the environmen­t. During cooking, fat droplets end up in the outside air by floating out through extractor fans or windows. Dr Squires, Associate Professor of Biophysics and Materials at the University of Bath, said: “We know the complex structures we saw are formed by similar fatty acid molecules, like soap in water.

“The idea that this may also be happening in the air above our heads is exciting, and raises challenges in understand­ing what these cooking fats are doing to the world around us.”

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