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Yea buring wood does pollute, but so does the coal that is being burned to generate electricity. And then theres the fuel used to hual the coal from the mines to the power plant, and the fuel used to run the equipment needed to mine the coal, and the electricty needed to manufactor the equipment that burns oil to mine the coal to burn in the power plants.
Then there is the oil used to make the ink that is used to print the money I pay the power companies to burn the coal to pollute our air. And the fuel used to cut the TREES, that are used to make the paper that our money is made from. I try to save our enviroment by eliminateing all the middle men and just cut the trees to heat my house.
Just some food for thought, trees are great storehouses of carbon. Whether this carbon is burned in our wood stoves or left in the woods to decay, it eventually is converted to CO2, either thru combustion in the wood stove, or consumption by microbial biology. Either way, this CO2 ends up in our atmosphere. The only difference is the amount of time involved in the conversion process. Yes buring wood releases CO2 gas into the atmosphere, as does coal and natural gas, and oil, but wood will not contain the the same concentration levels of the other heavy metals that are found in the other fuel sources. While buring wood does pollute, to me it is the lesser of the two evils.