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The Great American Wood Stove Changeout U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards

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Presentation on theme: "The Great American Wood Stove Changeout U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Great American Wood Stove Changeout U.S. EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards http://www.epa.gov/woodstoves

2 What is The Great American Wood Stove Changeout? A voluntary effort to encourage people to replace or “changeout” their inefficient wood stoves with cleaner-burning technologies.

3 Why do we care about residential wood smoke? Residential wood burning in the U.S. emits 420,000 tons of fine particle pollution (PM2.5) each year Of that amount, wood stoves contribute 80% or 336,000 tons of PM2.5 per year To put it in perspective: –Changing out 1 old, dirty, inefficient stove is equivalent to taking 7 old diesel buses off the road

4 Why we care about residential wood smoke A small community in Washington state That’s not fog, it’s wood smoke

5 What else is in wood smoke? Benzene Toluene Aldehyde gases Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons Dioxin

6 The benefits of changing out all old wood stoves in the U.S.

7 Who’s affected by wood smoke? Everyone, especially children and the elderly People with existing diseases such as: –Coronary artery disease –Heart failure –Asthma –Chronic bronchitis and emphysema

8 How can a Wood Stove Changeout help your community? Improves the health of children and your community It may help your area meet air quality standards for PM2.5 Improves visibility Improves indoor air quality Addresses short-term PM2.5 exposures to wood smoke

9 Benefits for the Consumer Cleaner Burning Technologies: –Pollute less – 70% less PM2.5 outdoors –More energy efficient –Use less fuel –Cut creosote buildup in chimneys, reducing fire risk –Save money and require less work

10 How do I get started? Identify potential partners –e.g. local elected officials, non-profits, industry Identify sources of funding –e.g. in-store discounts, supplemental environmental projects (SEPs), low-interest loans, local utility companies, grants, rebates Develop a project plan –determine staff, timing, resources and set goals

11 How can EPA help? Wood Stove Changeout “How To” Guide –Example brochures, posters, fact sheets, video footage available, case studies Strong Partnerships (e.g., hearth industry, American Lung Association) Wood Stove Changeout state/tribal implementation plan (S/TIP) credit guidance Options for securing funds, (e.g., grants, industry rebates, SEPs) Technical assistance

12 Success Stories Truckee, CA –Removed 912 non-EPA certified wood stoves and fireplace inserts over the past 7 years –Leveraged funding through the state government and Union Pacific Railroad –$300K donated, with approximately $306K expended over the past 7 years –Used a combination of regulatory measures, ordinances, and incentives to support program Result: –PM2.5 in Truckee has been reduced by approximately 30% from 1993-2006, even while development has increased by 70%

13 Success Stories Swinomish Tribe, WA - Seeking to replace 120 wood stoves on the reservation in 2007 - replaced 30 so far - Swinomish Tribe is funding the project - Monitoring of indoor air before and after installation - Receiving a grant from EPA Region 10. The money will fund some hand-held monitors - Next phase will replace stoves of tribal members who live off the reservation - Contact Tony Basabe, tbasabe@swinomish.nsn.us

14 Success Stories Libby, MT –Non-attainment for PM2.5 annual standard –82% of PM2.5 came from wood smoke –Changed out 1,100 wood stoves –Preliminary data suggests significant improvement in indoor and outdoor air quality

15 n Wood Stove Changeouts


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