ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter, study finds - medicalxpress
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
Throwing another log into a crackling fireplace on a cold winter's night
might seem like a cozy, harmless tradition. But Northwestern University
scientists have found residential wood burning is a major—yet often
overlooked—contributor to winter air pollution across the United States.
Although only 2% of U.S. homes rely on wood as their primary heating
source, residential wood burning accounts
for more than one-fifth of Americans' wintertime exposure to outdoor fine
particulate matter (PM2.5), the new study found.
These tiny airborne particles can penetrate deep into the lungs and enter
the bloodstream, where they are linked to increased risks of heart disease,
lung disease and even premature death. Among their findings, the scientists
calculated that pollution from residential wood burning is
associated with about 8,600 premature deaths per year.
Surprisingly, the majority of those most affected live in urban, not rural
areas. The health burden also disproportionately falls on people of color, who
burn less wood yet experience higher exposure levels and greater health harms
related to wood-smoke pollution. This is likely due to higher baseline
mortality rates and a long history of past discriminatory policies.
By reducing indoor wood burning, Americans could decrease outdoor air
pollution, resulting in major health benefits and thousands of saved lives.
The study was published in the journal Science Advances.
"Long-term exposure to fine particulate matter is associated with an
increased risk of cardiovascular diseases," said Northwestern's Kyan
Shlipak, who led the study.
"Studies have shown consistently that this exposure leads to a higher
risk of death. Our study suggests that one way to substantially reduce this
pollution is to reduce residential wood burning. Using alternative appliances
to heat homes instead of burning wood would have a big impact on fine
particulate matter in the air."
"We frequently hear about the negative health impacts of wildfire
smoke, but do not often consider the consequences of burning wood for heat in
our homes," said Northwestern's Daniel Horton, the study's senior author.
"Since only a small number of homes rely on wood burning for heat,
facilitating a home-heating appliance transition to cleaner burning or
non-burning heat sources could lead to outsized improvements in air
quality."
Horton is an associate professor of Earth, environmental and planetary
sciences at Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, where he
directs the Climate Change Research Group (CCRG). Shlipak is an undergraduate
in mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and
a member of the CCRG.
Neighborhood by neighborhood analysis
For decades, air-quality research and policies have focused on emissions
from vehicles, power plants, agriculture, industry and wildfires. However, in
the new study, Shlipak, Horton and their collaborators turned to a much less
studied and often overlooked source of pollution: wood burning in homes,
including emissions from wood-burning furnaces, boilers, fireplaces and stoves.
The team first gathered residential wood-burning data from the National
Emissions Inventory (NEI), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
comprehensive and detailed account of air pollution sources. The NEI bases its
wood-burning emissions estimates on national household surveys, housing data,
climate conditions and appliance types.
Then, the Northwestern team used a high-resolution atmospheric model to
simulate how pollution moves through the air. The model accounts for weather,
wind, temperature, terrain and atmospheric chemistry to estimate air quality
over time.
"Wood burning emissions enter the atmosphere, where they are affected
by meteorology," Horton said. "Some emissions are considered primary
pollutants, such as black carbon, and some interact with the atmosphere and
other constituents, and can form additional, secondary species of particulate
matter pollution."
To capture precise patterns of these
pollutants, Shlipak and Horton divided the continental U.S. into a grid of
4-kilometer by 4-kilometer squares.
For each square, they modeled the amount of pollution generated each hour,
how the pollution moves through the air and where it accumulates or disperses
over time. Rather than averaging particulate matter across entire cities or
counties, the neighborhood-scale grid enabled the research team to pinpoint
hotspots.
The team ran the model twice—with residential wood burning emissions and
without them—and compared the two simulations. Then, they attributed the
difference in pollution levels to wood burning. The results showed that
residential wood burning comprises about 22% of PM2.5 pollution in winter,
making it one of the single largest sources of fine particle pollution during
the U.S.'s coldest months.
Vulnerable populations bear the burden
Shlipak and Horton found that particulate matter from wood burning is
particularly problematic in cities and suburban communities due to the combined
effects of population density, emissions density and atmospheric transport.
In many cities, smoke from surrounding suburbs drifts into more densely
populated urban cores, which have limited wood-burning emissions. Even cities
not typically associated with wood burning, such as those in warmer climates,
can experience impacts from wood burning during cold snaps, recreational
burning and atmospheric transport.
"Our results suggest that the impacts of residential wood burning are
primarily an urban and suburban phenomenon," Shlipak said.
"This finding underscores the public health relevance of this
pollution. We estimate that long-term exposure to emissions from wintertime
wood burning is associated with approximately 8,600 deaths per year, and this
estimate does not account for particulate matter exposures in other
seasons."
To determine who is most affected, the researchers combined pollution
estimates with U.S. census data and census-tract-level mortality data. The
researchers found that although people of color burn less wood, they
experienced higher exposure levels and greater harms from wood-burning
pollution.
In the Chicago metropolitan area, for example, the researchers estimate
that Black communities face more than 30% higher adverse health effects from
residential wood burning than the citywide average.
"While a lot of emissions from residential wood burning come from the
suburbs, pollutants emitted into the air don't typically stay put," Horton
said.
"When this pollution is transported over densely populated cities,
more people are exposed. Because people of color tend to be more susceptible to
environmental stressors due to the long tail of past discriminatory policies,
we estimate larger negative health outcomes for people of color."
"People of color face both higher baseline mortality rates and higher
rates of exposure to pollution from wood burning," Shlipak said.
"However, people of color are correlated with lower emissions rates,
indicating that a large fraction of this pollution is transported to these
communities, rather than emitted by them."
Shlipak and Horton note that their study only looks at the outdoor impacts of exposure to wood-burning pollution. Additional impacts from indoor exposure to particulate matter also have public health consequences but were not included in this study.
Provided
by Northwestern
University
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter, study finds

