Still on. Takes effect first day of next year.Is that still on the books? I thought they dropped it. But I could absolutely be wrong
I hope they drop it.
Still on. Takes effect first day of next year.Is that still on the books? I thought they dropped it. But I could absolutely be wrong
What do you mean by "cleaner"? Fewer particulates? Yes. But that is not the same thing as fewer new carbon molecules being released into the atmosphere.Natural gas burns cleaner than wood.
Assuming you aren't cutting down living trees for firewood, there's no need to plant new trees in order to be carbon neutral. The carbon contained in the dead tree you are burning would have been released as the wood decayed anyway. The same cannot be said for natural gas, which burns carbon that was trapped deep within the Earth and would not have been released anyway.True. I think he was talking about carbon neutrality. One could argue that wood burning is carbon neutral. It is if you plant enough new trees to offset your stove's carbon footprint. I'd argue the same is true for any carbon emissions. Planting new trees could go a long way to addressing global warming but it would take billions of trees.
Well some of it would be released into the atmosphere some would be injested by bugs and some would end up in the ground. Its still about as close to carbon neutral as it gets. But it is not.Assuming you aren't cutting down living trees for firewood, there's no need to plant new trees in order to be carbon neutral. The carbon contained in the dead tree you are burning would have been released as the wood decayed anyway. The same cannot be said for natural gas, which burns carbon that was trapped deep within the Earth and would not have been released anyway.
Fair enough.Well some of it would be released into the atmosphere some would be injested by bugs and some would end up in the ground. Its still about as close to carbon neutral as it gets. But it is not.
Honestly there is really very little widespread push against woodstoves. There are some areas prone to air inversions where the smoke just lays there and is pretty unpleasant. Those are generally the areas with no burn days and stricter regulations. And anyone who has lived next to someone who smolders wet wood all day will eventually get annoyed. Nothing we can do about the air inversion areas. But proper burning techniques with good fuel will avoid most problems even with old stoves.Up here in the mountains of TN I can't see it going away in my lifetime. Many people heat with wood as the primary if not only heat source. The Fatboy propane tank I see couldn't do much in a pinch. This time of year I see many piles of pine trunks in a yard being processed, it's just too easy and cheap.
I have more wood to burn than I will in my lifetime and lots more on the way. There are 100s of saplings each year I have to deal with around the house. Since these pines are just waiting to fall, not if but when, I get rid of them close to the place but let them go further out in the woods.
I can understand the problems y'all have with the Ken and Karens in some areas. They run on emotions rather than reason. It was said and is true, one ice storm will make a lot of people rethink the total dependence on the electrical grid. It's just sad it'll be such a sharp lesson to learn.
Definitely. My son, when looking at a house, doesn't consider what he wants or considers attractive. He looks at what sells most easily. Of course that too can be a guessing game. But he seems to have a good sense of it. If there were widespread demand for wood stoves, he'd put them in. That he replaces or rips them out tells me he doesn't think most people want them these days.Yes, our geography does lead to occasional wood burning bans in some years. They are a good idea when there is a major temperature inversion with no air flow between mountain ranges. FWIW, we didn't have one last year.
CA has a lot of air quality issues. Most of the bans there apply to urban areas, namely in the LA and SF region. Flippers and real estate agents have very different objectives from a homeowner. They don't pay the future utility bills.
They don’t want a barn for their buggy eitherThat he replaces or rips them out tells me he doesn't think most people want them these days.
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