Tuesday, June 30, 2026

On America’s 250th birthday, a look at Ben Franklin and wood stoves in 1776

In 1776 in North America the open hearth remained the everyday default for cooking and much domestic heat, but significant innovations were already present and spreading unevenly—concentrated in port towns, shipyards, and wherever foundries, skilled metalworkers, or immigrant masonry traditions existed.

The idea of “closed” or “airtight” wood or cook stoves were far from reality for most Americans, even though they were beginning to emerge and take hold in Europe. Part of the challenge was economic: it was cheaper to build a stone hearth and chimney that to buy a steel stove. But part of the challenge was cultural and emotional: many people believed the open flame was healthier than flames in a closed box.

The man in the middle of these debates was none other than Ben Franklin, one of the core founding fathers of America, who was also an inventor, tinkerer and publisher. To have such a renowned founding father so intimately connected with the lowly wood stove has been a complex legacy. The Alliance for Green Heat has often commented on this complex legacy because those complexities live on today: millions of Americans want an open flame in their living room, just as Ben Franklin did, despite the negative health impact. 

As we celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, we should remember that Ben Franklin’s role was far
Franklin's original design.
greater than most of us appreciate. He was the only founding father to sign four of the key documents that enabled us to be the independent country we are today. The declaration of independence in 1776 was just the beginning. We still had to win the war, and Franklin was the architect of our relationship with France, a decisive ally. He was a signatory of the Treaty of the Alliance with France in 1778, the Treaty of Paris in 1783, and finally, the US Constitution in 1787. Not to mention that during this entire period, he kept tinkering on wood stove designs when living here, in London and in Paris. Of all his tinkering, the wood stove was the one he stuck with all of his life, as it was such an important technology.Franklin’s reputation as an inventor of the wood stove is larger than what he actually invented. Nothing that he invented sold well, and nothing really survived other than what was adapted by others. He never even invented a “stove.” He tried to invent a more efficient fireplace but it was a commercial failure because it had a downdraft that didn’t work, filling the room with smoke. The most famous inventor who took the Franklin and adapted the design was David Rittenhouse, who got rid of the downdraft and added folding doors. But because of Franklin’s name and popularity, and because he purposely did not patent the device, the Rittenhouse stove lived on as the Franklin stove and still lives on today.

As we celebrate the 250th anniversary of our country, its worth remembering that energy supplies have always been vital for America and it began with wood. In the 1770s wood was the primary domestic fuel in towns and cities. Just like today, prices and availability varied seasonally (higher in winter) and by proximity to woodlands and navigable transport. Urban centers like Philadelphia, Boston, and New York relied on timber brought in by wagon or boat, so haulage/boat freight often added more to the retail price than the raw timber did.

The Revolutionary War also disrupted the firewood trade, provoked requisitions and impressment of
Today, this is the Franklin stove
model, with folding doors and no 
downdraft.
supplies by both armies. Boston’s port closure (1774) and wartime blockades created acute local shortages and relief drives for firewood.

But it was a period of change away from a renewable carbon based fuel and towards non-renewable carbon fuels. By the 1880s–1890s coal (anthracite and bituminous), manufactured gas, and later coke and electricity were displacing cordwood in many cities.

Rapid urban industrialization and expansion of railroads made coal cheaper and more convenient for heating, cooking, and industry. Cities shifted from cordwood toward anthracite/bituminous coal and manufactured gas for lighting/heating; rural households and small towns often remained wood-dependent longer and some still do.

Railroads also helped the firewood trade, enlarging supply regions and smoothing seasonal shortfalls. Where rail access was good, wood prices tended to fall or stabilize; where railroads were absent or local woodlands were depleted, prices rose.

More efficient, closed stoves reduced per-household wood consumption and coal- and gas-burning appliances further cut demand for cordwood in urban homes. The reliance on firewood in the 1700s, and heavy demand through most of the 1800s created devastating deforestation, and our forests didn’t begin to recover until he late 1800s–early 1900s. Full recovery was uneven by region and continued through the mid‑ to late‑20th century.
If we hadn't discovered coal, our forests
would have been cut down far more than 
they were.

Ben Franklin sought to reduce the amount of wood we needed to heat our homes by participating in a process that continues today: how to design cleaner and more efficient stoves that consistently work in the hands of homeowners. Two hundred years later, another prominent figure – President Jimmy Carter – carried forward that legacy by installing modern, efficient wood stoves in the White House, and urging Americans to use them to save energy.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Pellet Market Hits New High as Europe Weighs Its Clean Heat Options

Every year since its debut release in 2007, Bioenergy Europe’s Statistical Report has provided an in-depth overview of the bioenergy sector in the EU27 Member States.  And every year, the Alliance for Green Heat promotes the report because the detail of using pellets for heat is very instructive for North America.  

The report has extensive information about residential and commercial pellet heating trends as well as a section on the pellet stove market, the residential boiler market and the commercial boiler market. 

AGH reproduces part of the free sample report, which is just a fraction of the entire 177-page report.  We urge our readers to buy the full report, or become a member of Bioenergy Europe to get a free copy.


The full report is free to all Bioenergy Europe members. Not a member yet?
 
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Pellet curious? Get the sample report.
 

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Founded in 1990, Bioenergy Europe is a non-profit, Brussels-based international organization bringing together over 40 associations and 120 companies, as well as academia and research institutes from across Europe.


Excerpts of the report:


Across Europe, pellet appliances provide renewable heating to more than 6.5 million households.


The pellet sector always likes a cold winter and the 2025 – 2026 heating season generously gave us one after all. Stocks that had accumulated along the supply chain – sometimes from 2022 and 2023 – finally ran out and this led to a boost in production across several

European markets: a nice contrast from the situation in the last two years. Sometimes, too much of a good thing can be stressing as well and tensions were felt around February 2026, when supply dried up and prices took an upward trend. In some countries, the situation was such that the pellet sector was brought back into the media spotlight (probably for the first time since 2022), but thankfully the tension was short-lived as temperatures rose and spring came. Although nobody would call this a “crisis”, it highlighted that the supply and demand gap for pellets is not always comfortably wide on the supply side.


On the front of the pellet appliances, the political discussions on the revision of the Ecodesign

Regulation appear to be frozen for now. The market situation shows recovery of sales for pellet boilers and stoves in 2025, although the numbers remain well below the historical highs of 2021-2022 and the situation in 2023-2024 has been generally very bad. But there are two main trends worth discussing briefly. The first is that the situation in the pellet stoves market looks somewhat better than the pellet boiler market. Buyers of pellet stoves range from high-income households who want an impressive fire in a beautiful appliance in their living room, to low-income households who prioritize cost savings, so creating a uniform narrative and explanations as to this is not straightforward. But on the whole, it seems that pellet stoves work well with the wider electrification trend in heating and are deployed more and more as a complementary heating system to heat pumps. The second trend concerns the pellet boilers and their connection with subsidies for their purchase. As more expensive investments overall, pellet boiler sales boom when there is good support for their purchase – as has been the case in the last years in Austria and Poland.


We already know that the new-bridging mechanism for Drax (progress has been made for Lynemouth as well) is expected to roughly half the UK demand.


As illustrated in Figure 4, this total is split between large-scale uses, which account for 58% of demand (~30,1 million tonnes), and small-scale heating applications, which make up the remaining 42% (~21,5 million tonnes).


Europe remains by far the world's largest pellet consuming region, representing 70% of global demand when industrial and small-scale uses are combined. European small-scale heat alone accounts for 37% of total consumption, reflecting the continued importance of wood pellets in residential and commercial heating across the continent. European industrial use, primarily

power generation and combined heat and power, contributes a further 33%.

[editor: this chart shows pellet stove sales in the Republic of Serbia (RS),  Czechia (CZ), Austria (AT) and Poland (PL). Other countries with high levels of installed units such as Germany, France and Italy and not included here.]

At the same time, the intersection between the premium and industrial pellet markets could

become one of the most delicate issues in the coming years. The revision of support schemes for large Northern European plants may release significant pellet volumes currently destined for industrial use, making them available to other markets, including the residential one. However, the actual magnitude of this phenomenon remains difficult to assess.


In previous years, pellets were perceived in many European markets as the leading renewable option for residential heating, before strong competition emerged among different renewable technologies, including heat pumps, which are now slowing down in several national markets. As a result, uncertainty remains high among consumers regarding which technology can truly guarantee the most reliable and cost-effective solution in the medium term.

[Editor: "Derived heat is a well-known term in Europe and comes from waste heat from making electricity from fossil fuel, or from biomass.  Once generated, derived heat is piped through a network—commonly known as a district heating grid—as hot water or steam to warm spaces (residential and commercial) and support industrial process. Derived heat makes up about 5% to 9% of final household energy consumption across the EU, though usage varies wildly by location. It is highly popular in Northern European and Nordic countries; for example, it covers more than half of water and space heating needs in Denmark, Sweden, and Finland.]

 Country abbreviations:


The ENplus® certification scheme ensures wood pellet quality for pellet professionals and end-users over the entire supply chain (i.e. from production to end-user delivery). The certification has been active for almost 15 years now and is governed and managed by Bioenergy Europe (through its network - the European Pellet Council)



ENplus® continues to invest significant resources in fraud management. In 2025, the scheme management team has further strengthened the scheme’s blacklist database by identifying fraudulent entities alongside misleading websites and contact details that users should avoid. As of May 2026, ENplus® has successfully detected and resolved a total of 1.470 fraud cases – an achievement that underlines the scheme’s ongoing commitment to preserving its integrity and protecting its users.


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