- Most wood stoves these days are 'clean burning', and suitable for use in smokeless zones, as they have emissions very low in the particulate matter that causes pollution.
I didn't know that, thanks for the info.
- There is currently a large overcapacity in UK wood resources. Many forests were planted years ago when wood fuel was in greater demand, and the shift to gas has meant that many of these forests have fallen into dis-management.
Thats interesting, and cheery news - when do we ever find out a prime resource really is in oversupply!!
But I would hazard a guess that any such oversupply will be highly prized and very short lived, even in a post-PO UK that does NOT have widespread domestic use of food as a fuel.
My guess is contruction and essential power generation would (should?) get first call.
I further suggest that any huge oversupply of wood would be very short lived if we made domestic consumption viable - thats approx 22m homes in the uk!
Great that Andy and others can and do live 100% on wood - thats good work fellas, if I have no gas then I freeze!
How long would the North Sea oil fields have lasted (could still last) when used only for truely vital tasks (not private cars) ?
Forgetting import/export for a minute, widespread consumption of North Sea oil in private cars (and such) has made it last far less time that it might have, and we'll have to face the consequences of that.
Similarly I fear widespread use of wood will rapidly find us in the same situation, only no wood and no oil is worse than just no oil!
We might have to outlaw woodstoves and also the chopping down of trees.
Shocking and outrageous as that sounds - if we want to discourge potentially desperate and cold people from consuming the UK wood surpless in just one winter (anyone have a view on that?) then we need some disinsentives.
Perhaps the simple lack of available stoves to buy (or any money...) will prevent widespread adoption of the woodstove and prolong the apparent wood surpless ??