Fireplaces and stoves are bigger polluters than
traffic
Increases in wood burning have offset gains in other
areas, including cleaning up exhaust fumes
Gary Fuller
@drgaryfuller
Fri 7 May
2021 06.00 BST
Fireplaces
and stoves are now the largest single source of primary particle pollution in
the UK, greater than traffic and industry. About 40% of the UK’s primary
particle pollution comes from just 7% of homes that burn solid fuel. Will the
new ban on sales of coal and wet wood in England help the problem or risk
making it worse?
In 1950s
Britain, replacing coal with so-called smokeless fuel (made from powered coal
and industrial waste coke) was the main solution to our smogs. London’s
particle pollution decreased by 66% in just 10 years. A similar ban was
implemented in Dublin in 1990 and particle pollution decreased by 70% in one
year.
These are
dramatic improvements but after the ban the cities were still significantly
polluted by solid fuel. In London the gradual rollout of gas central heating
played an important role in continuing to improve air pollution through the
1970s.
But UK
solid-fuel users mainly burn wood. Government estimates suggest increases in
wood burning since 2005 have offset gains from other sectors, including
cleaning up traffic exhaust.
Banning the
sale of wet wood has not been tried before. According to the UK government,
burning wet wood produces about four times as much particle pollution as dry
wood. However, wet wood accounts for about only 20% of the total being burnt,
limiting the potential impact of the ban.
The wood
that people buy in garages or garden centres is not labelled as dry or wet. The
ban will mean that sellers will now only sell dry wood – but the fear is that
this could encourage people to believe they can burn more solid fuels at home,
even if it is smokeless fuels and dry woods. Writing in Country Living,
Emma-Louise Pritchard concludes that the new rules “mean that those of us with
fires or wood-burning stoves in our homes can continue to light them with added
peace of mind”.
The sale of
fuels made from coffee grounds and olive waste may further encourage home
burning. In Dublin, despite the coal ban, the marketing of wood and peat as
green biofuels has contributed to solid-fuel heating remaining the biggest
source of particle pollution in the city.
Several
local councils, including Camden in north London, are clearer in their
messaging. They have asked people not to heat their homes with any solid fuels.

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