The link was about outdoor and indoor wood boilers. There have been other reports about wood burning stoves and inserts and west coast TBNers have mentioned that one just cannot burn wood to heat in their states which is taking things too far.
On the other hand, I drive through an area were there are a half dozen outdoor wood boilers, and during cold weather, those things are producing some serious smoke. Enough smoke to make that area look like it is shrouded in heavy fog. Smoke so thick it is dangerous to drive through. No way that is healthy to breath. If I was living near those things I would be PISSED. I looked at buying an outdoor wood boiler but decided against them for a variety of reasons. One of the reasons was that we are on top of a hill, and in some weather conditions the smoke would lay down in the low areas and affect the people who live near us and our neighbors. Now, some of the people who live near us don't give consideration to others, but I will not stoop to their level.
Just up the road from this on area there are two other outdoor wood burners. One is and older unit that will literally fill a part of a major lake with smoke. Something like a 1/4 mile by 1/2 mile of lake filled with smoke. Less than a mile away is an outdoor boiler that was installed a few years ago. You have to look real hard and close to see if that thing is burning. Monday, it was 16 degrees, and I could barely see the smoke from the boiler. I looked to see if he was burning and it was very hard to notice. I bet 99.999% of the people who drive by that boiler even know it is there. I have seen more "smoke" from gas heaters in new houses than what this new boiler was producing. One day I am going to have time when I see the man in the yards and I will have to stop and talk with him about his setup. It is real nice.
Banning wood burners is going to far but having more efficient equipment is not a bad thing. The EPA gets into trouble when its regulations step across the line into management and/or forbidding things. We heat our house with wood and some states are going to far but the other extreme is what I see in some area with wood boilers.
Later,
Dan