Wood can be an excellent fuel because it is a renewable energy source, if sustainably harvested. However, air pollution from wood fires and the transport of firewood to urban areas are environmentally detrimental.
About 20% of Australian homes use wood for heating, but the wood is often obtained from unsustainable sources.
If you have a wood heater, use only sustainably-harvested wood to avoid habitat destruction and rare species extinction, and do not use treated timbers that may give off toxic pollutants when burned.
Burn wood only in high efficiency, low emission heaters. Open fireplaces lose up to 90% of the heat straight up the chimney, making them the least efficient of all heating technologies.
Even worse, the hot air rising up the chimney draws large amounts of cold air into the room to replace it, making whatever heating effect the fireplace has even less effective. On the other hand, a well made and properly installed slow combustion heater can achieve up to 60% efficiency, assuming it is operated correctly.
Using wood for heating - what to do
What not to do
Pellet heaters
Pellet heaters work in a very different way to a conventional wood heater. Instead of loading up a firebox with large chunks of wood and controlling the airflow, a pellet heater is controlled by giving the fuel all the air it can use and adjusting the rate that the fuel is fed into the firebox.
Pellet heaters don't use wood in its natural form, but rather, small pellets made from wood or agricultural waste, such as rice husks.
The waste is granulised, dried so it contains almost no moisture, and compressed into tiny pellets of a consistent size and density. They have a large surface area compared to their volume, and so burn quickly.
The pellets won't spontaneously combust, so there has to be an ignition source to get the ball rolling. This is in the form of a small electric heating element.
Once the pellets are burning, the element usually switches off, but electricity is still used to run the fans and electronic control system.
Because these heaters use electricity, you will have to pay for an electrician to connect it.
Even though the wood pellets burn almost completely, they do produce some ash which has to be regularly removed from the heater.
Also, the auger system can make some noise, so it is recommended you listen to the heater operating before you buy it.
Clean Air Wood Heaters - www.cleanairwoodheaters.com.au
Ph. 03 9740 7444
Pellet Heaters Australia - www.pelletheaters.com.au
Ph. 02 6628 7477
Listed suppliers are a guide and are not endorsed by Green Cross Australia or the Alternative Technology Association.
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