The National (Scotland)

Wood-burning stoves ban petition lodged

Trade body calls for U-turn on new builds moratorium

- BY XANDER ELLIARDS

THE trade body representi­ng the wood-burning stove industry has lodged a petition with the Scottish Parliament calling for the ban on installati­ons in new-build homes to be reversed.

Andy Hill, the chair of the Stove Industry Associatio­n (SIA), said a petition had been lodged calling for a Uturn on the policy which he claimed “threatens the livelihood­s of the estimated 2000 residents of Scotland employed within the stove industry”.

It emerged after new building regulation­s, which came into effect on April 1, effectivel­y banned woodburnin­g stoves from being installed in new-build Scottish houses.

The new regulation­s also state that, if an existing building undergoes major conversion work, it should have any wood-burning stove removed if it “was located within a part of the building which is subject to conversion”.

However, homes built before the regulation­s came into effect can still have wood-burning stoves installed and people with them in their houses will not be compelled to remove them.

The SIA questioned the environmen­tal motivation behind the policy, saying in a briefing document: “Woodburnin­g stoves are the lowest carbon emitting heating available for homes, with a carbon intensity 1/19th of direct electric heating.”

The body pointed to UK Government figures which state that the carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2-eq) emission factor (kgCO2e/kWh) of wood logs is 1/19th that of electricit­y (0.01074 compared to 0.207074) and 1/16th that of mains gas (0.01074 compared to 0.18).

It added: “The exclusion of lowcarbon technology such as modern stoves from the New Build Heat

Standard and the proposed Heat in Building Bill is in direct conflict with the stated goals of both pieces of legislatio­n.”

The SIA said it had lodged the petition with the Scottish Parliament on May 3 and it is expected to go live for signatures in due course.

Hill said: “The SIA strongly opposes the New Build Heat Standard and the proposed Heat in Buildings Bill.

“By effectivel­y banning the permitted use of wood-burning stoves in new-build properties, the new standard leaves households extremely vulnerable to total heat loss in the event of a power cut or where there are grid supply issues.

“Furthermor­e, the standard specifies heating technology with higher carbon emissions than a woodburnin­g stove which is fundamenta­lly at odds with the objective of the standard.

“The proposed Heat in Buildings Bill not only seeks to apply the same restrictio­ns on wood-burning stoves, but also has the potential to decimate the housing market by imposing a requiremen­t for those purchasing a property to ‘comply with the prohibitio­n on polluting heating within a specified amount of time following completion of the sale’.”

He continued: “Such legislatio­n is not only severely detrimenta­l to consumer choice, it has the potential to leave Scottish residents without heat and facing higher than ever domestic heating bills.

“It also threatens the livelihood­s of the estimated 2000 residents of Scotland employed within the stove industry and risks stripping approximat­ely £60 million annually from the Scottish economy.”

The Scottish Government was approached for comment.

 ?? ?? Wood-burning stoves in new-build houses across Scotland are effectivel­y banned under regulation­s introduced last month
Wood-burning stoves in new-build houses across Scotland are effectivel­y banned under regulation­s introduced last month

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