News12 New York
N12 Originals
Numbers & Links
Local
Crime
Weather
NYC Politics
Rebuilding Brooklyn
Vote 2026: Brooklyn primary election

NJ, NY and 8 other states plan to sue EPA over standards for residential wood-burning stoves

The states, including New Jersey and New York, allege that the EPA’s current standards must be reviewed and that its testing and certification program is so ineffective, it has failed to ensure the existing standards.

Associated Press

Jul 3, 2023, 6:20 AM

Updated

Share:

Attorneys general from 10 states plan to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, saying its failure to review and ensure emissions standards for residential wood-burning stoves has allowed the continued sale of appliances that could worsen pollution.

That means programs that encourage people to trade in older stoves and other wood-burning appliances, such as forced-air furnaces, haven't necessarily improved air quality, the states say.

“If newer wood heaters do not meet cleaner standards, then programs to change out old wood heaters may provide little health benefits at significant public cost,” the states wrote Thursday in a 60-day notice of intent to sue.

The states involved are Alaska, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Washington, as well as the Puget Sound Clean Air Agency.

They allege that the EPA's current standards aren't good enough and that even if they were, the agency's testing and certification program is so ineffective that it has failed to ensure those standards.

The EPA declined to comment on pending litigation.

The states allege that the EPA’s current standards must be reviewed and that its testing and certification program is so ineffective, it has failed to ensure the existing standards.

The EPA's Office of Inspector General, in a report released in February, found the EPA's 2015 performance standards for residential wood heaters was flawed and said the agency has “approved methods that lack clarity and allow too much flexibility."

"As a result, certification tests may not be accurate, do not reflect real-world conditions, and may result in some wood heaters being certified for sale that emit too much particulate-matter pollution,” the report said.

The agency supports programs aimed at replacing older, dirtier wood heaters with newer, cleaner models and distributed about $82 million in grants for residential exchanges between fiscal years 2015 and 2021, the report said.

“However, if the replacement models do not meet emission standards because of the reasons described above, millions of federal, state, and local dollars could be wasted,” it said.

EPA officials, in response to a draft of the report, said they take the concerns seriously and would continue to take steps to address testing and certification issues.

The report also noted that about 39% of households in the Fairbanks North Star Borough, in Alaska's Interior, use wood-fired heaters in the winter, when temperatures can plunge well below zero degrees F (minus 18 degrees C).

The area is susceptible to inversions that trap layers of cold air close to the ground, and that in turn traps pollution for days or weeks at a time.

More than 3,000 wood-burning appliances were replaced in the region between 2010 and 2021 through a changeout program supported by federal, state and local money, but the report said local residents “do not know whether wood heaters in their homes meet standards” and poor air quality continues to be a concern.

Top Stories

02:12
DBLSHOOTINGTHUMB

Teen, man injured in Crown Heights double shooting

02:00
CX Headlines 4

Sunshine all day in Brooklyn - rain returns Thursday night

02:07
policemisconductprobeCM_2026-06-24-17-13-07

Federal, NYPD investigators search homes of current and former top police officials

02:19
briberyarrestCM_2026-06-24-17-12-45

Chief of staff to former NYC Mayor Eric Adams, 3 others charged in federal bribery probe

01:40
BKEdric624noon_2026-06-24-13-20-43

Man robbed on Q train platform at Newkirk Avenue station in Flatbush

02:33
LINDSAY5PMELECTIONS_2026-06-24-17-55-58

Mamdani-backed congressional candidates score major primary victories

01:47
workzonespeedcamerascoming530pZC_2026-06-24-17-57-48

Slow down or pay up: MTA to begin speed enforcement at work zones at select NYC tunnels and bridges

Vote 2026

Vote 2026: Brooklyn primary results

Vote 2026

Who won? New York primary election results from across the region

APARTMENT WINDOW FEDERAL CHARGES MON copy

Jamaican man sentenced to 46 months in federal prison for operating a sweepstakes scam

01:42
BKGalindo624_2026-06-24-06-57-25

House of Goal to bring World Cup celebration to Brooklyn

 Darializa Avila Chevalier

Darializa Avila Chevalier unseats longtime NY-13 incumbent Adriano Espaillat

claire valdez

Claire Valdez defeats Antonio Reynoso to win NY 7th Congressional District Democratic primary

00:22
LANDERWIN

Brad Lander unseats incumbent Rep. Dan Goldman in NY-10 Democratic primary

03:10
KLNGOLDMANPKGQUOTE0623530P_2026-06-23-17-53-00

Coffee shop faces backlash, DOJ investigation after banning Rep. Dan Goldman

01:27
KLNWATERMAINMRC0623530P_2026-06-23-17-55-41

Water main break causes large hole to form in Canarsie

00:48
detreleasedfromhospital730pZC_2026-06-23-20-00-36

Detective shot during police-involved shooting now out of the hospital, union says

00:34
arsonsubwaythumb

Teen sentenced for setting sleeping subway rider on fire at Penn Station in 2025

00:37
BKVANDERBOORTAVE62326_2026-06-23-12-51-18

Man arrested in connection to deadly hit-and-run in East Williamsburg

00:38
BKATMSTOLEN62326_2026-06-23-12-52-10

Two men wanted for stealing ATM machine from deli following fire in Clinton Hill

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices