Greatest growth in rural areas as increase in homes with wood-burning stoves contributes to new air pollution hotspots
Growing numbers of UK homes with wood-burning stoves are leading to new air pollution hotspots.
Analysis by led by University College London (UCL) found that the spatial density of burners is related to the amount of air pollution that builds up in neighbourhoods on winter evenings. The greatest density of wood burners was found in urban areas outside major cities. The list was topped by Worthing, Norwich, Reading, Cambridge and Hastings councils, which all had more than 100 wood burners per square kilometre.
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