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Hi,
I live in Scotland in an area that is not (currently) a smoke control area, and burn house coal and seasoned wood (not kiln dried, simply dried in the wood store next to the house) in our open fire, i.e. a traditional fireplace.
I read (here https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51581817) that bans on burning coal and wood in open fires are getting closer.
Or to put it more precisely:
1) sales of coal and wood will be phased out / restricted
2) the regulations prohibit "the emission of smoke from a chimney" (unless you're burning authorised fuel or using an exempt appliance).
I guess that means in future I will only be allowed to burn things like coal briquettes and kiln-dried wood and in my previous experience (living in London in the 1990s) those don't produce the same kind of fire, more a glowing effect from the briquettes and the kiln dried wood sparks like fury, not producing that nice heat you get from wood that isn't absolutely bone-dry.
However, if the regulation is intended to restrict the emission of smoke (or more particularly - aimed at removing the small particles of air pollution), would it not be possible to fit some kind of filter to remove these harmful particles? I came across this "wood stove filter" https://exodraft.co.uk/product/particlefilter/esp-particle-filter/, not released just yet but looks like it will hit the market next year and will do just that - "filter out hazardous and ultrafine particles from [...] fireplace".
Would that be a solution that would allow the continued burning of "traditional" coal and wood, whilst removing the pollution?
Thanks for any insights/answers!
I live in Scotland in an area that is not (currently) a smoke control area, and burn house coal and seasoned wood (not kiln dried, simply dried in the wood store next to the house) in our open fire, i.e. a traditional fireplace.
I read (here https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51581817) that bans on burning coal and wood in open fires are getting closer.
Or to put it more precisely:
1) sales of coal and wood will be phased out / restricted
2) the regulations prohibit "the emission of smoke from a chimney" (unless you're burning authorised fuel or using an exempt appliance).
I guess that means in future I will only be allowed to burn things like coal briquettes and kiln-dried wood and in my previous experience (living in London in the 1990s) those don't produce the same kind of fire, more a glowing effect from the briquettes and the kiln dried wood sparks like fury, not producing that nice heat you get from wood that isn't absolutely bone-dry.
However, if the regulation is intended to restrict the emission of smoke (or more particularly - aimed at removing the small particles of air pollution), would it not be possible to fit some kind of filter to remove these harmful particles? I came across this "wood stove filter" https://exodraft.co.uk/product/particlefilter/esp-particle-filter/, not released just yet but looks like it will hit the market next year and will do just that - "filter out hazardous and ultrafine particles from [...] fireplace".
Would that be a solution that would allow the continued burning of "traditional" coal and wood, whilst removing the pollution?
Thanks for any insights/answers!