Updated: Feb. 2, 2016
The EPA issued its long-awaited voluntary hangtag, which will help consumers identify the cleanest and most efficient burning wood and pellet heaters on the market. Manufacturers who make stoves and boilers that already meet the stricter 2020 emissions standards can use the hangtag.
The hangtag is a major step towards a “green” or “eco-label”
for wood and pellet stoves for designating those stoves that emitted the least
amount of smoke in the test lab. The efficiency of the stove must also be disclosed on the hangtag, which is usually more important information for consumers than emissions.
To date, there are three Lopi stoves that bear the hangtag - the Cape Cod Hybrid Fyre, the Flushwood Insert Hybrid Fyre and the Small Flushwood Hybrid Fyre, and a number of Blaze King stoves, the Katydid and four Garn Boilers. The Alliance urges consumers to consider buying stoves that bear this label or that at least ones that disclose their actual efficiency on the list of EPA certified stoves.
To date, there are three Lopi stoves that bear the hangtag - the Cape Cod Hybrid Fyre, the Flushwood Insert Hybrid Fyre and the Small Flushwood Hybrid Fyre, and a number of Blaze King stoves, the Katydid and four Garn Boilers. The Alliance urges consumers to consider buying stoves that bear this label or that at least ones that disclose their actual efficiency on the list of EPA certified stoves.
Most European countries have had eco-labels for stoves
for many years that have helped drive the market to exceed the minimum emission
and efficiency standards. The EPA
designed this hangtag “to
provide an incentive to manufacturers to meet the federal 2020 standards early”
but the main industry stove association, the Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association
(HPBA) is suing the EPA to prevent those stricter 2020 standards from taking
effect. It is still too early to tell if
the big stove manufacturers may decline to use the hangtag because they may
view it as a step toward the 2020 standards. Some companies are already taking steps to display the hangtag.
The
current emission standard for wood and pellet stoves is 4.5 grams per hour and
the more stringent 2020 standard will be 2.0 grams per hour. There are 76 models of pellet stoves on the
EPA’s list of certified stoves and 48 of them are already under the 2 grams per
hour limit, so 63% of pellet stove models already meet these 2020 standards and
are eligible to display the consumer hangtag. Eleven stoves, or 14% of all pellet stoves are
already less than 1 gram per hour.
More
than 2-dozen non-catalytic stoves and more than 2-dozen catalytic stoves are
eligible to use the hangtag. (Unlike
pellet stoves, the emissions from wood stoves are not designed to estimate
emissions from in-home use and homeowners will typically emit far more smoke
than labs can achieve during a certification test.)
Among EPA certified wood and pellet boilers and furnaces, there are 72
models on the market and 38 of them meet the 2020 emissions standards and can
use the hangtag. Of those 38, only 5 of
the models use cord wood achieve the 2020 standards but virtually all of the
pellet units (33 out of 35) achieve the 2020 standards. Most of the certified
pellet boilers are technologies imported from Europe and emit about one tenth
of the emissions that certified cord wood boilers emit.
The
development of the hangtag posed a number of concerns for the EPA, including
whether they should list heat output in BTUs per hour, which is already
included on the EPA’s list of certified stoves. The EPA decided to use a more
general estimate of heat output, “Heating Area” in square feet,
estimated by
the companies themselves, because BTU per hour claims have become too
unreliable and prone to exaggeration. In
the past, the EPA did not require that test labs use actual efficiency numbers
in heat output calculations and test labs have used a range of efficiency
estimates to make stoves look more powerful that they actually are.
The
hangtag also provides a box for companies to designate if they test with
cordwood. For the first time ever, consumers can start to identify stoves
that are designed and tested with the fuel that they will use. No stove has been certified
with cordwood yet and the ASTM cordwood test method is still in progress, but
several companies are expected to test with cordwood in coming months.
The EPA
is using the back of the hangtag to list important educational messages. Among those messages is the strongest
endorsement yet of certified pellets, a move that may irritate some pellet
manufacturers who have been resisting getting their pellets certified. The EPA says that
“non-certified pellets may be high in ash content, low and energy output, and
have impurities that could harm your families health.” While some cheaper pellets have high ash
content, low heat output and possibly even contain impurities, the quality of
many uncertified pellet brands are on par with those that are certified and
some of the highest quality pellets are not certified.
The EPA’s
willingness to strongly endorse pellet certification comes at a time when the
main certifying body, the Pellet Fuel Institute (PFI), is also suing the EPA over pellet certification issues.
Among wood and pellet boilers, there are 72 models on the
market and 38 of them meet the 2020 emissions standards and can use the
hang-tag. Of those 38, only 5 of the
models use cord wood achieve the 2020 standards and can use the hang-tag but
virtually all of the pellet units (33 out of 35) achieve the 2020 standards. Most
of the certified pellet boilers are technology imported from Europe and emit
about one tenth of the emissions that the cord wood boilers emit.
The success of the EPA’s consumer hangtag, like many eco labels, may hinge on branding and how recognizable the hangtag is to consumers. If the EPA, states, and non-profits put resources into promoting the hangtag, consumers will be more likely to ask for it and base their purchasing decisions on it. The first companies to start using the hangtag could see a boost in their sales and it could put pressure on the mainstream companies to use the hangtag, if they aren’t already.
“This hangtag will help consumers not only choose cleaner
stoves, but also to choose companies committed to making cleaner stoves and to releasing verified efficiency values to their consumers,” said
John Ackerly, President of the Alliance for Green Heat. “If the stove you buy today already meets the
2020 standards, the parts and service for that stove are more likely to be
available 5-10 years from now, when you need it,” Ackerly added.
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Visit the EPA's page on the voluntary hang-tag. For more on problems with EPA listings on Btu output per hour, the lack of disclosure of stove efficiencies, the EPA's 2020 emission standards for stoves and boilers and PFI pellet certification scheme.