[Strawbale] Sustainability of wood heat.
activism98201 at verizon.net
activism98201 at verizon.net
Sat Feb 2 00:45:09 CST 2008
Some even peg NOx as contributing something like 300 times that of CO2.
Perhaps the greatest NOx contributor is agriculture. Perhaps we should be concentrating on stopping it, I don't know :-(
The REAL point, IMHO, is total volume. And this comes about by total population (per-capita) emittance.
We'll ultimately find the balance (most likely it will find us).
-Mark Nagel
Everett, WA
=====================
From: Derek Roff <derek at unm.edu>
> Particulates depend on how well you run the stove. Poison and
> pollution are matters of concentration.
While I agree that concentration is important, poison and pollution are
planetary issues. Greenhouse gas emissions, in particular, have an
impact around the world. Wood heat can be a fairly responsible choice,
but that is not automatic. Even efficient stoves put out a lot of
pollution as they get warmed up.
Some people take the simplified view, that wood burning is carbon
neutral, and therefore has no significant impact on the atmosphere.
The reasoning goes, trees take CO2 out of the air, which is then
released when the wood is burned. This is not the whole story. Even a
clean burning stove produces a fair quantity of oxides of nitrogen
(NOx) and other gases, in addition to CO2 and H2O. NOx compounds are
more active greenhouse gases than CO2. Many sources say that NOx
produces 5 times the warming effect as a similar amount of CO2. NOx
compounds also contribute to acid rain.
Burning wood in an efficient stove is likely to be better for the
planet than burning fossil fuel. But burning as little as possible,
and conserving energy is still a much greener choice.
> 70-80% [waste] is a bit harsh. Even crummy wood stoves can manage
> about 60% if they have a reasonable tight door.
I think Speireag was discussing the energy wasted in heating a
greenhouse with wood, rather than the simple efficiency of a wood
stove. As Sherwood said in another post, "Energy efficient and green
house are an oxymoron."
One last assertion: PVC has a high environmental cost. Please avoid
it when there is a practical alternative.
Derelict
Derek Roff
Language Learning Center
Ortega Hall 129, MSC03-2100
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
505/277-7368, fax 505/277-3885
Internet: derek at unm.edu
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