thanks this is interesting...
Home> International
Mystery Fog Near Moscow: Why City Smells Like Burned Popcorn
Nov 10, 2014, 12:48 PM ET
By KIRIT RADIA
Kirit Radia More from Kirit »
Reporter
via World News
Share
18
Share on email
8 Comments
PHOTO: Moscow is pictured in this file photo.
Moscow is pictured in this file photo.
Izzet Keribar/Getty Images
For much of the day, Moscow has smelled like a mixture of sulfur and burned popcorn.
Russias Emergencies Ministry eventually said the cause was a leak at a sulfur dioxide processor at an oil refinery outside town, according to Russian media reports.
US Embassy in Moscow Faces Cold War-Era Harassment
Russias Currency Tumbles as Investors Panic
While Muscovites vexed about safety and searched for answers on social media, authorities were initially silent. They then suggested people stay indoors, before insisting the vapors are harmless.
The Emergencies Ministry said that while the amount of hydrogen sulfide in the air was above acceptable levels for a short while, levels of sulfur dioxide are within the acceptable range.
Gazprom Neft, which runs the plant, however, reportedly denied there was an accident.
Amid the conflicting and shifting statements, Moscows over 11.5 million residents have been left wondering who to believe.
Near the plant, a thick, hazy cloud hung in the air. A local resident posted this video, complaining that they suffer from these kinds of emissions often.
http://abcnews.go.com/International/moscows-mystery-fog-city-smells-burned-popcorn/story?id=26811998
Yeah, how about that. Looks like an oil company is screwing up.
The comments are anti-oil and in favor of the EPA.
Good grief!