By John Daniel Davidson
In Jack London’s famous short story, “To Build A Fire,” a man freezes
to death because he underestimates the cold in America’s far north and
cannot build a proper fire. The unnamed man—a chechaquo, what
Alaska natives call newcomers—is accompanied by a wolf-dog that knows
the danger of the cold and is wholly indifferent to the fate of the man.
“This man did not know cold. Possibly, all the generations of his
ancestry had been ignorant of cold, of real cold, of cold 107 degrees
below freezing point. But the dog knew; all its ancestry knew, and it
had inherited the knowledge.”
If only the bureaucrats in
Washington DC knew what the wolf-dog knew. But alas, now comes the
federal government to tell the inhabitants of Alaska’s interior that,
really, they should not be building fires to keep themselves warm during
the winter. The New York Times reports
the Environmental Protection Agency could soon declare the Alaskan
cities of Fairbanks and North Pole, which have a combined population of
about 100,000, in “serious” noncompliance of the Clean Air Act early
next year.
Like most people in Alaska, the residents of those frozen cities are
burning wood to keep themselves warm this winter. Smoke from
wood-burning stoves increases small-particle pollution, which settles in
low-lying areas and can be breathed in. The EPA thinks this is a big
problem. Eight years ago, the agency ruled that wide swaths of the most
densely populated parts of the region were in “non-attainment” of
federal air quality standards.
That prompted state and local
authorities to look for ways to cut down on pollution from wood-burning
stoves, including the possibility of fining residents who burn wood.
After all, a declaration of noncompliance from the EPA would have
enormous economic implications for the region, like the loss of federal
transportation funding.
The problem is, there’s no replacement for
wood-burning stoves in Alaska’s interior. Heating oil is too expensive
for a lot of people, and natural gas isn’t available. So they’ve got to
burn something. The average low temperature in Fairbanks in December is
13 degrees below zero. In January, it’s 17 below. During the coldest
days of winter, the high temperature averages -2 degrees, and
it can get as cold as -60. This is not a place where you play games with
the cold. If you don’t keep the fire lit, you die. For people of modest
means, and especially for the poor, that means you burn wood in a
stove—and you keep that fire lit around the clock.
HT: Marvin Frisbey
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