Last September, workers discovered a massive, smelly blob of congealed fat clogging a sewer in London, England. The mass, called a fatberg, was nearly as long as a city block and weighed as much as a blue whale.
Fatbergs are a big problem for cities like London with aging sewer systems and growing populations. The gunky globs form when fats and oils wash down kitchen sinks and react with the element calcium in wastewater. The calcium causes the fat to solidify. As it hardens, it traps muck swept into sewers. “[Fatbergs] potentially trap everything that’s being flushed down the toilet,” says Joel Ducoste, an environmental engineer at North Carolina State University. In addition to looking nasty, he says, “they stink!”