It seems that even wood isn’t green or renewable enough anymore. The
EPA has recently banned the production and sale of 80 percent of
America’s current wood-burning stoves, the oldest heating method known
to mankind and mainstay of rural homes and many of our nation’s poorest
residents. The agency’s stringent one-size-fits-all rules apply equally
to heavily air-polluted cities and far cleaner plus typically colder
off-grid wilderness areas such as large regions of Alaska and the
American West.
While EPA’s most recent regulations aren’t altogether new, their
impacts will nonetheless be severe. Whereas restrictions had previously
banned wood-burning stoves that didn’t limit fine airborne particulate
emissions to 15 micrograms per cubic meter of air, the change will
impose a maximum 12 microgram limit. To put this amount in context, EPA estimates that secondhand tobacco smoke in a closed car can expose a person to 3,000-4,000 micrograms of particulates per cubic meter.
Most wood stoves that warm cabin and home residents from
coast-to-coast can’t meet that standard. Older stoves that don’t cannot
be traded in for updated types, but instead must be rendered inoperable,
destroyed, or recycled as scrap metal.
READ MORE: http://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/2014/01/29/epas-wood-burning-stove-ban-has-chilling-consequences-for-many-rural-people/
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