“Sulfur smell” in Ile-de-France
“Sulfur smell”
in Ile-de-France:
several hypotheses
for a mysterious scent
An unpleasant odor was widely felt in the Paris region during the night from Sunday to Monday. The analyzes carried out by the Paris prefecture found no answer.
The laboratory of the Prefecture of Police made samples last night to try
to identify the origin of the smell of sulfur which annoyed the Ile-de-France
residents this Sunday evening .LP/Fred Dugit
The inhabitants of the north of Île-de-France spent time with their noses
out the window this Sunday evening. A sulfur scent emanated everywhere in the
north of the capital, causing many worried messages on social networks.
Ile-de-France firefighters have received numerous calls to report an
unusual smell of sulfur in the air, without being able to give an explanation
on Monday for this phenomenon, possibly linked to bad weather. The smell was
reported as far as Melun (50 km south of Paris) and Meaux (50 km east of
Paris). But also since this Monday morning, in Hauts-de-France or in the Pays
de la Loire.
"The smell of sulfur was recognizable but the concentration very, very
low," said Monday morning Emmanuel Grégoire, first deputy to the mayor of
Paris, who commented on the "incident" as early as Sunday evening on
social networks. The police headquarters laboratory took samples last night to
try to identify the origin of this odor.
No compound identified
"These analyzes did not identify any particular compound, in
particular sulfur, which could have been the cause of these odors,"
announced the Prefecture of Police in the evening. She also recalls that she
"was not aware of any event of the industrial incident type in the region
which could have been the source".
Several hypotheses are envisaged: "the sanitation source" of
waste water or "a cloud of sulfur dioxide arriving from abroad", said
Emmanuel Grégoire on behalf of the Paris city hall. On this last point,
"the experts tell us that it is possible," he added without giving
further details. Sulfur dioxide (SO2) can be recognized by a characteristic
rotten egg smell.
As for Airparif, the regional body that monitors air pollution in
Île-de-France, we remain cautious about this second scenario. "There is
little risk of import and there would have been other reports in other
regions" said Pierre Pernot, Airparif engineer. "On our measurement
network, there were no significant increases in air pollution this
Sunday," he continues. "It is quite logical because the very
dispersive conditions, significant precipitation and strong wind, do not favor
such pollution", adds Pierre Pernot. “They are more likely to be local
sources of odor, even if it affects a good part of the region. This goes in the
direction of the sanitation track ”, specifies the Airparif executive.
"Buried gases" that come out with precipitation ?
"There are different compounds that can come out of sanitation,
including sulfur compounds, and in this case the human nose is the best measure
of characterization to characterize the smell", analyzes Pierre Pernot
again. The foul odor could have been emitted by a component present in
wastewater, hydrogen sulfide (H2S), but which is not part of Airparif's
surveys.
At Cedre (Center for Documentation of Research and Experimentation on
Accidental Water Pollution) the hypothesis of a flow of rainwater causing this
olfactory pollution seems plausible. "Following very heavy precipitation,
the water navigates to recovery basins, then creates unusual currents which
create abnormal mixing," explains Nicolas Tamic, Deputy Director of Cedre.
Gases that are in the mud buried at the bottom then rise to the surface and
then emerge at the level of the drainage basins, "adds the scientist. He
specifies that this remains only a theory in the present case, since its
establishment was not requested for more precise analyzes, but that this type
of scenario has already happened.
Contacted, SIAAP, the main Ile-de-France water purification structure, for
its part ensures that "the checks, measurements and monitoring carried out
since yesterday and again this morning indicate that the origin of the odors
felt by the population does not come from the sanitation system managed by
SIAAP ”.
"No abnormal value designating the presence of a gas having the odor
of sulfur has been measured in particular on the sensors installed in its
networks", writes the organization in a press release, specifying that it
had noted "no technical malfunction on its installations (networks and stations)
”.
Nitrogen dioxide from thunderstorms or from abroad ?
Another hypothesis: the possibility of nitrogen oxide pollution. If it can
be caused by thunderstorms, and there were many this weekend in the Paris
region, it could also result from nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution from
northern Europe.
According to Vincent-Henri Peuch, director of Copernicus, a European Union
monitoring program, the air content changed during the evening, becoming
charged with nitrate, ammonium and sulfate, under the influence of the masses d’air
from northern Europe. But "we think that it is mainly pollution by fine
particles (PM2.5 / PM10) rather than NO2, even if the flow of North probably
brought back quickly a whole set of pollutants and which remained in low layers
", He specifies to the Parisian.
Airparif therefore assured that it had not observed very high levels of NO2
on Sunday: 40 micrograms per m3. A rather low threshold, the information
threshold being fixed at 200 and the alert threshold at 400.
The results of the prefecture's investigation
will no doubt allow us to know a little more.
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