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Wood or Gas:-
Which Fuel is
Better for the Environment?
Q: I would appreciate your
sending me any information you may have about the differences
between open wood-burning fireplaces and gas fireplaces, in terms
of the amount of pollution each produces.
A: We don't have the comparison
data you request available in one document, but can give you
a quick overview of the debate concerning the environmental impact
of the two fuels as we understand it:
An open wood-burning fireplace
emits between 50 and 100 grams of particulate waste per hour,
along with large quantities of water, carbon dioxide (CO2), and
trace amounts of various other gases. The gaseous emissions from
a wood fire are considered by some scientists to be environmentally
benign, as a fallen tree will emit the same amount of CO2 gases
whether it is burned or left to rot, and the same tree will have
converted many times that amount of CO2 to oxygen during its
lifetime.
The main environmental
concern regarding wood burning is the inhalation of the exhaust
particulates, especially those known as PM-10's, which are particles
small enough to lodge in the lungs. Today's approved woodstoves
were created to address this issue; they are required by law
to produce less than 4.5 grams of particulate emissions per hour.
The combustion of natural
gas doesn't produce significant particulates; it is the gaseous
elements in gas exhaust that are of environmental concern. Gas
exhaust is composed mostly of water, CO2, and nitrogen dioxide.
The CO2 from natural gas
doesn't enter the atmosphere unless the gas is burned, so the
combustion of gas fuel is considered by some scientists to be
a much more significant (and avoidable) contributor to the so-called
"greenhouse effect" than the combustion of wood. Further,
nitrogen dioxide emissions from natural gas exhaust combine with
water in the atmosphere to form nitric acid, which is a factor
in the environmental hazard known as acid rain.
Environmentalists seem
to have formed two camps regarding the relative environmental
impact of the two fuels. The anti-particulate emissions extremists
would ban wood fires altogether, while those who view the greenhouse
effect and acid rain as the larger environmental threat would
strongly disagree, and would also point out that wood fuel is
a renewable resource, while natural gas is in limited supply.
Both camps would agree
that neither fuel should be burned frivolously: wood fires and
decorative gas logs in open fireplaces waste the fuel resource
and contribute needlessly to airborne pollution. If you are deciding
how best to use your fireplace, install an approved wood insert
or high-efficiency gas insert.
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