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A disturbing smell of sulfur extends from Lille to Nantes: what you need to know

On the night of Sunday to Monday, May 11, the phone did not stop ringing at the firefighters of theIle-de-France. A few hours earlier, it had been the same with their colleagues Hauts-de-France. And, since this Monday morning, they are the inhabitants of Pays de la Loire – and particularly of Nantes and some Sarthe – who call the men of fire.

Each time, everyone reports a phenomenon that is both unpleasant and disturbing: a strong smell of sulfur hovering in the air. Each time, the fear of an industrial accident like that of Lubrisol, near Rouen, is evoked by the people – sometimes panicked – who compose the 18. Wrongly: No specific intervention is in progress explain the firefighters.

Given the scale of the number of calls, they even cracked an official press release on Twitter Sunday evening, calling on Parisians to calm down.

That smell felt in several departments is probably linked to recent bad weather, they explain. Taken into account, this odor does not correspond to any particular intervention in progress. Please only dial 18-112 in case of a proven emergency, they add. If their answer is reassuring, it does not solve this double problem: what is this smell? And what causes it?

What is this smell?

It is a sign of air pollution. To what? To two main elements. To NO2 first – translate: to nitrogen dioxide. This is part of the NOx family, in other words nitrogen oxides, which are formed by the combination of oxygen and nitrogen. Remember that NO2 is a very toxic gas by inhalation. It smells bad, it is pungent and it stings the eyes because, in short, it interacts chemically with water (including therefore with that of our eyes).

However, this odor is also a sign of sulfur dioxide (SO2) pollution, with the characteristic rotten egg smell.

What is the origin of this smell?

– Sewage mixing

This was suggested by the Paris city hall last night. Emmanuel Grégoire, first deputy, says that it could be related to the shuffling of the sewerage networks because of the heavy rain which brings up the decomposition gases.

Without being false, on the contrary, the statement does not seem sufficient: certainly, the severe thunderstorms this weekend resulted in heavy precipitation, themselves clogging up and stirring up the rainwater and sanitation network. From there to raise such rotten egg smells, and over such a distance, from Lille to Nantes, the thing seems unlikely.

It is obvious that sulfur dioxide was released into the atmosphere through the sewers of large cities. But this gas is not necessarily enough to create a phenomenon of such magnitude on its own. So what could have amplified the phenomenon?

– The storms themselves

We don’t necessarily know, but the stormy phenomena are nitrogen oxide factories (incidentally, the same goes for volcanic eruptions and large forest fires).

More than 1.2 billion lightning strikes occur worldwide each year. Laboratory and field tests have revealed that the core of some lightning reaches 29,700 ° C. Monstrous heat, in any case sufficient to instantly melt the sand and break the oxygen and nitrogen molecules into two individual atoms.

Translate: each of these billions of lightnings produces a breath of nitrogen oxide (Nox) which reacts with sunlight and other atmospheric gases to produce ozone, in particular. Near the Earth’s surface, ozone can harm the health of humans and plants; higher in the atmosphere, it’s a potent greenhouse gas; but it still has for him, in the stratosphere, to block the radiation of ultraviolet rays, responsible for cancers.

However, France experienced severe thunderstorms this weekend. Not thousands of lightnings, of course, but enough to produce nitrogen oxides.

– A pollution wave

We saw it this weekend, and we can only notice it since this Monday morning: after hot and humid south-southwest flows which brought powerful and lasting storms over France, a huge front cold, coming from the north-northeast, quickly repelled this hot air to bring its cool temperatures to the south of the Loire.

Which also caused thick mists and fog on Sunday on the English Channel, Cotentin and Brittany (photo below).

In doing so, this strong wind brought with it, and accumulated along the warm border, the atmosphere charged with pollution (NO2 and SO2 in particular) which reigned over Great Britain and Northern Europe (Netherlands, Belgium…), especially above the big cities.

Because, it must be said again, the main source of nitrogen oxide pollution is of human origin: it is the combustion of fossil fuels (coal, fuel oil, natural gas). Automobile exhausts, and more particularly diesel vehicles, account for a significant part of atmospheric pollution by NOx. Fermentation of wet grains stored in silos or certain massive agricultural applications are also sources of exposure to these pollutants.

As we can see on the map at the head of the article, the NO2 concentration was particularly high on a diagonal between Lille and Nantes, last night and it should remain so until this evening at least (map above).

Is this phenomenon dangerous?

Yes. And no. As is often the case, everything depends on the quantity of the pollutant considered. In this case, the concentration of NO2 (or NOx) and SO2 in the atmosphere.

The concentrations recorded last night and this morning do not exceed the danger thresholds established by the authorities. Thus, the limit values ​​for Airparif correspond, on an annual average, to 50 µg / m³ for SO2 and 40 µg / m³ for NO2. And the values ​​recorded last night did not seem to have exceeded 50 µg / m³ for NO2.

Anyway, the police headquarters laboratory took samples last night to try to identify the origin of this odor. Results must be known during the day

The phenomenon has apparently been more spectacular than dangerous. Which in no way seeks to exonerate the reality of this pollution.

To conclude, we have therefore witnessed, for the past 24 hours, a combination of factors – natural and human – and pollution – nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide – which have triggered the appearance, on our territory, of this gigantic cloud. with a foul odor. Not the conditions dreamed of for a first day of deconfinement.

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