Doctor’s Orders: Wood Burning Hazardous to Your Health

- by Dr. Bri­an Moench, Utah Physi­cians for a Healthy Environment
Civ­i­liza­tion orches­trates the curb­ing of one person’s free­doms for the pro­tec­tion of oth­ers and the greater good. When two people’s free­doms are mutu­al­ly exclu­sive, civ­i­liza­tion embraces the con­cept that the free­dom to not be harmed by oth­ers takes prece­dence. Traf­fic laws, zon­ing ordi­nances, and reg­u­la­tions gov­ern­ing air trav­el are all exam­ples of that pri­or­i­ty. In fact, vir­tu­al­ly all laws that allow a free soci­ety to rise above chaos, anar­chy and bar­barism are the result of a sim­i­lar calculation.
We all accept that free­dom for one per­son to smoke on an air­plane has been sub­ju­gat­ed to free­dom for all the oth­er pas­sen­gers to breathe clean air. In cities through­out North Amer­i­ca there is a grow­ing recog­ni­tion that wood burn­ing in an urban set­ting should be con­sid­ered as much of an anachro­nism as smok­ing on an airplane.
Two years ago in my home state of Utah, the most con­ser­v­a­tive state in the nation, our equal­ly con­ser­v­a­tive gov­er­nor, Gary Her­bert, declared in his open­ing speech to our leg­is­la­ture that he would pur­sue a ban on wood burn­ing through­out the win­ter sea­son in our largest cities–a tru­ly remark­able devel­op­ment. Here’s what led to that proposal.
In most major, north­ern cities, wood burn­ing can be as much of a source of the worst kind of com­mu­ni­ty air pol­lu­tion as all vehi­cle exhaust. Such is the case where I live in Salt Lake City, Utah. Even in Los Ange­les, a study showed that in the win­ter, res­i­den­tial wood com­bus­tion there con­tributed 30 per­cent of pri­ma­ry organ­ic aerosols (prob­a­bly the most impor­tant mass com­po­nent of par­tic­u­late pol­lu­tion), more than motor vehi­cle exhaust, which con­tributed 21 per­cent. But that is only the begin­ning of the story.
Wood smoke is unique­ly tox­ic among all con­trib­u­tors to urban air pol­lu­tion. The free rad­i­cal chem­i­cals in wood smoke are active forty times as long as those from cig­a­rette smoke, result­ing in a great­ly pro­longed oppor­tu­ni­ty to dam­age indi­vid­ual cells. Oth­er stud­ies sug­gest that the life­time can­cer risk from wood smoke is twelve times greater than that from an equal vol­ume of sec­ond hand tobac­co smoke.
Par­ti­cles in wood smoke are extra­or­di­nar­i­ly small, behav­ing essen­tial­ly like gas­es, which ampli­fies their human health impact in mul­ti­ple ways. The small size makes them easy to inhale into the small­est recess­es of the lungs and less like­ly to be exhaled. They are then picked up by the blood and dis­trib­uted through­out the body, caus­ing inflam­ma­tion and bio­log­ic dis­rup­tion wher­ev­er they go.
The small size even allows these par­ti­cles to enter indi­vid­ual cells and crit­i­cal sub cel­lu­lar struc­tures like the mito­chon­dria and nucle­us, where the all impor­tant chro­mo­somes lie.  These par­ti­cles can direct­ly inter­act with and change the func­tion­ing of chro­mo­somes, lit­er­al­ly with­in min­utes after expo­sure, which plays a promi­nent role in many seri­ous diseases.
Attached to these tiny wood smoke par­ti­cles are at least 200 of the most tox­ic com­pounds known–dioxins, furans, formalde­hyde, heavy met­als, and poly­cyclic aro­mat­ic hydro­car­bons (PAHs). One fire­place burn­ing 10 pounds of wood in an hour will release as many PAHs as 6,000 packs of cig­a­rettes. No one in their right mind, even smok­ers, would think that sit­ting in front of 6,000 smol­der­ing packs of cig­a­rettes dur­ing a cozy win­ter evening would be a good idea.
Pol­lu­tion con­cen­trates near its sources. Unlike Las Vegas, what hap­pens in your chim­ney obvi­ous­ly doesn’t stay in your chim­ney. For most peo­ple res­i­den­tial and restau­rant wood smoke is just about the only type of seri­ous pol­lu­tion emit­ted right next to your home, from a height where dis­per­sion is min­i­mal, cre­at­ing local pol­lu­tion hot spots. And this is the worst pos­si­ble place for expo­sure because peo­ple gen­er­al­ly spend most of their time at home, espe­cial­ly dur­ing the winter.
Fur­ther­more, your home pro­vides lit­tle pro­tec­tion from a wood-burn­ing neigh­bor. The small size of wood smoke par­ti­cles allows them to eas­i­ly pen­e­trate into homes, at rates up to 88% as high as out­doors. And if you are the wood burn­er, what goes up your chim­ney, quick­ly seeps back into your own home.
A Cal­i­for­nia study showed some peo­ple are breath­ing 2,500 times more pol­lu­tion than oth­ers in the same mon­i­tor­ing zone. One of the main rea­sons why is wood burn­ing.  Dan­ger­ous and oppres­sive pol­lu­tion in Chi­na has received wide­spread media atten­tion of late. But here in the Unit­ed States, the rest of your com­mu­ni­ty can be enjoy­ing clean air, but if your neigh­bor is a wood burn­er you can be liv­ing in a dif­fer­ent uni­verse, breath­ing a lev­el of pol­lu­tion that would make Bei­jing, Chi­na seem like a breath of fresh air.
The term “intake frac­tion” describes per­haps the most under­rat­ed con­sid­er­a­tion in assess­ing the health impact of var­i­ous pol­lu­tion sources. It refers to the per­cent­age of pol­lu­tion emit­ted that is actu­al­ly inhaled by humans. With wood smoke, giv­en the above fac­tors, the intake frac­tion is extreme­ly high, much more so than vir­tu­al­ly any oth­er pol­lu­tion source.
Wood boil­ers deserve spe­cial con­dem­na­tion as they can emit tru­ly shock­ing amounts of pol­lu­tion, and sim­ply should be banned in all but the most remote loca­tions. Lev­els of par­tic­u­late pol­lu­tion mea­sured 50 ft. away from a boil­er can spike to 880 times the lev­el that the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion con­sid­ers accept­able long term expo­sure. Even at 150 feet away, spikes fre­quent­ly occurred at 50 to 100 times that “accept­able” level.
Once the health haz­ards of sec­ond hand cig­a­rette smoke were firm­ly estab­lished, sweep­ing ordi­nances through­out the coun­try were passed to pro­tect peo­ple from sec­ond hand cig­a­rette smoke. Sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly we are at that stage now with wood burn­ing. We don’t pro­hib­it smok­ing in pub­lic venues because of what it does to lev­els of atmos­pher­ic  com­mu­ni­ty pol­lu­tion. We do so because no one should be forced to breathe some­one else’s cig­a­rette smoke. For all the same rea­sons, no one should be forced to breathe some­one else’s wood smoke.
More­over, replac­ing old stoves with new “cer­ti­fied” stoves is no more a solu­tion than putting fil­ters on cig­a­rettes was a solu­tion to the plague of smok­ing. Stove change out pro­grams are mere­ly mon­ey mak­ing schemes for the Hearth and Patio and Bar­be­cue Assoc (HPBA). The per­for­mance of “cer­ti­fied” stoves in the real world, out­side the lab­o­ra­to­ry, are no where near as clean as cer­ti­fi­ca­tion suggests.
It is a com­mon mis­con­cep­tion that burn­ing wood is car­bon neu­tral and there­fore less of an impact on the cli­mate than fos­sil fuels. This has lead to poor pub­lic pol­i­cy in both the US and Europe. The amount of car­bon released per unit of ener­gy pro­duced is actu­al­ly greater for wood than it is for fos­sil fuels. More­over, burn­ing wood releas­es car­bon now when we can least afford to do so, car­bon that would oth­er­wise have been stored for decades or per­haps cen­turies. While sus­tain­able forestry prac­tices can help repay that “car­bon debt” even­tu­al­ly, those ben­e­fits do not accrue until decades into the future, far too late to be of much help. Con­sid­er­ing the entire car­bon life cycle of wood, we should look at wood burn­ing with as much antipa­thy as fos­sil fuels.
Gov. Herbert’s pro­posed ban on win­ter time wood burn­ing nev­er made it into pub­lic pol­i­cy, the HPBA made sure of that. They stoked up the “my right to burn, trumps your right to breathe” lib­er­tar­i­ans, made sure the pub­lic hear­ings became a parade of “burn­er” out­rage, flew in hired guns from Cal­i­for­nia, paid for an expen­sive lob­by­ist, and the leg­is­la­ture did what they do best, caved to spe­cial interests.
The first step in defeat­ing the HPBA is lift­ing the veil of igno­rance. Here is a brief mes­sage to share with your wood burn­ing neigh­bors. If you are not a smok­er, burn­ing wood is prob­a­bly the great­est threat to your own health of any­thing that you can do. But it is also a threat to your chil­dren and your neigh­bors, as inap­pro­pri­ate and intol­er­a­ble as blow­ing cig­a­rette smoke in their faces all win­ter long. Your neigh­bors are less than enthu­si­as­tic about sac­ri­fic­ing their health for your free­dom to burn wood. Liv­ing in a civ­i­lized soci­ety means they shouldn’t have to.
Dr. Bri­an Moench of Salt Lake City, Utah is Pres­i­dent of Utah Physi­cians for a Healthy Envi­ron­ment; mem­ber of Union of Con­cerned Sci­en­tists; mem­ber of radi­a­tion and health com­mit­tee, Physi­cians for Social Respon­si­bil­i­ty; for­mer instruc­tor at Har­vard Med­ical School; and for­mer adjunct fac­ul­ty mem­ber at Uni­ver­si­ty of Utah Hon­ors Col­lege, teach­ing pub­lic health and the environment.

 


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