When you burn garbage, you make poison!
Are you tempted to burn some household garbage in your wood
burning stove, furnace or fireplace? Do you think burning it might be better
than burying it in a land fill site?
In fact, it is not. While it may seem harmless enough, burning garbage is
damaging to the environment, to your family's and your community's health,
and to your wood burning system.
A toxic cocktail
Burning garbage produces unpredictable results because, unlike seasoned firewood,
garbage contains a whole range of materials and chemicals that react when
burned together. For example, household garbage contains various forms of
paper and plastics. When paper and plastics are burned, you don't really
destroy them, you just change their chemical form. The inks and dyes used
for the colouring and printing of paper and plastics add to the chemical cocktail
that is emitted when they are burned. The problem with burning any kind of
garbage is that you just don't know what the resulting pollutants will be.
One of the pollutants that results when paper and plastics are burned in
a wood stove is dioxin, a highly toxic chemical that doesn't decompose and
which builds up in the tissues of animals and humans. Airborne dioxin settles
in soils and on vegetation, some of which may then be eaten by livestock.
Dioxin builds up in fats in the body and is concentrated in cows milk and
even in human mother's milk. According to a World Health Organization fact
sheet,
"Once dioxins have entered the environment or body, they are there to
stay due to their uncanny ability to dissolve in fats and to their rock-solid
chemical stability."
Certain kinds of toxic substances, including dioxin, can be destroyed using
industrial-scale incinerators, but at the lower temperatures found in residential
wood burners, dioxins and other pollutants are created, not destroyed. The
dioxin produced in wood stoves when garbage is burned is not just emitted
with the exhaust, but is also concentrated in the residual ashes. However
that ash is disposed of, its toxic legacy will remain. The burning of garbage
at home or the cottage is the fifth largest known source of dioxins in Canada.
Damage to your stove, fireplace or furnace
All modern wood stoves and furnaces are independently safety tested and certified
to ensure that when properly installed and used they will work well and not
be hazardous. This testing does not involve fuels other than wood. As a result,
none of the safety features, instructions or clearances provided by manufacturers
are valid if the stove is used as an incinerator. Wood stoves, fireplaces
and furnaces are designed and safety certified to burn clean, dry, uncoated,
untreated wood, and just enough plain newspaper to get fires started.
Advanced wood stoves that use catalytic combustors to reduce smoke emissions
are particularly sensitive to fuel quality. Their performance can be ruined
if garbage is burned because the resulting vapours coat the catalyst and
prevent it from functioning properly. The chemical cocktail produced when
garbage is burned can attack stove parts and cause corrosion and other damage.
Even if burning garbage were not bad for the environment and bad for your
wood burning equipment, it would still not be a good fuel because it makes
very little heat and the large amount of resulting ash clogs up the firebox.
Don't
burn, recycle
Recycling facilities and garbage sorting at land fill sites have improved
dramatically in the past decade. Now, most forms of paper and plastic can
be recycled. Recycling is far kinder to the environment than burning because
it avoids the immediate air pollution and reduces the consumption of resources
for new products.
One of the best ways to cut your garbage output is to reduce the amount of
packaging you buy. Since food preparation is one of the biggest sources of
household garbage and because, in general, the more processed the food, the
more packaging it has around it, buying less processed food is a good way
to cut down on the amount of garbage your household creates. By reducing
the packaging you buy, recycling as much waste as you can and burning only
clean, uncoated wood, your household can contribute to a healthier environment.