Oily Vapour Emissions from Restaurant Exhaust Systems in Hong Kong: Pedestrian Exposure, Health Implications, and Regulatory Gaps

Authors

Dr. Wing Cheung TANG

BEng(Hons), MSc, MBA, PhD, MCGI, CMgr, FCMI, FIMA, CPMC, FIMC, Adjunct Professor of Jesselton University College, Sabah (Malaysia)

Article Information

DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100500648

Subject Category: Environment

Volume/Issue: 10/5 | Page No: 9633-9646

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-05-27

Accepted: 2026-06-01

Published: 2026-06-10

Abstract

The dense urban fabric of Hong Kong, with narrow streets, high-rise buildings and concentration of food and beverage establishments at street level, creates a unique microenvironment in which pedestrians are frequently exposed to oily vapour emissions from restaurant exhaust systems. This article systematically analyses the sources, dispersion mechanisms, health implications and regulatory landscape of exposure to oily vapour from restaurants in Hong Kong. Existing literature and government data suggest poor exhaust filtration, incorrectly located outlets (often at pedestrian breathing height) and the use of wok cooking (which produces high levels of aerosolised oil particles) as key factors in creating localised air pollution hotspots. Health effects include respiratory irritation, potential carcinogenic risk from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) associated with cooking fumes, and decreased quality of life for pedestrians and nearby residents. The article acknowledges major gaps in the research: no Hong Epidemiological study on long-term health effects of exposure to oily vapour at the pavement level in Hong Kong Real-time monitoring data at the pedestrian breathing height is insufficient No standardised metrics for enforcement of 'nuisance' under the Air Pollution Control Ordinance Limited evaluation of existing mitigation technologies (electrostatic precipitators, wet scrubbers, activated carbon filters) in the local context We have done a regulatory analysis and found that the Environmental Protection Department (EPD) regulates chimney emissions but ground-level exhaust from ground floor restaurants is often in a regulatory grey area. The article ends with a research agenda that includes personal exposure monitoring, cost-benefit analysis of retrofit requirements, and urban planning interventions such as relocating exhaust outlets and improving street canyon ventilation.

Keywords

air quality, cooking oil fumes, pedestrian exposure, restaurant emissions, street canyon

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