A report from Environmental Defense Fund shows that just one percent of New York City’s buildings, those burning the dirtiest grades of heating oil, produce more pollution than all the city’s cars and trucks combined. The report “The Bottom of the Barrel: How the Dirtiest Heating Oil Pollutes Our Air and Harms Our Health,” advocates phasing out the dirty oil by 2020.
The pollution produced by burning No. 4 or 6 oil—some 1,000 tons of it every year—threatens the health of all New Yorkers, creating a rain of toxic soot that aggravates asthma, increases the risk of cancer, exacerbates respiratory illnesses and can cause premature death.
About 9,000 buildings, many in the city’s wealthiest neighborhoods, use this unrefined sludge. The Flatiron Building (5th Avenue and 23rd St.) and The Dakota (Central Park West at 72nd St.) are among a number of iconic structures that burn it.
EDF has created this interactive map so that every tenant with a mouse can see if their building, or others nearby, use dirty oil and take action to help them convert to cleaner fuel. The map web site also lets users send a message to the mayor, asking him to phase out permits to burn the dirtiest oils.
If your building burns dirty oil, work with your property manager to switch to cleaner fuel. Building managers and owners can improve air quality and often lower operating costs by:
- switching to No. 2 heating oil or natural gas, and
- implementing efficiency measures.
This map is a companion to the report The Bottom of The Barrel [PDF], from Environmental Defense Fund and The Urban Green Council. The report details the threat to our air quality and offers solutions to cut soot pollution from heating systems by 95%.
The report contains:
- policy recommendations to the city for banning dirty heating oil,
- guidance for converting buildings to cleaner fuels and
- proper maintenance and efficiency measures to help reduce heating fuel expenses, saving thousands of dollars a year.
Report contents and links to each chapter
View the full report [PDF].
Contents:
- Executive Summary [PDF]
- Ch. 1: Why worry about boiler emissions? [PDF]
- Ch. 2: Boiler 101: typical NYC residential heating system [PDF]
- Ch. 3: The fuel effect: What is being burned matters [PDF]
- Ch. 4: Reduction of fuel use with proper maintenance and reduction of emissions with fuel switching [PDF]
- Ch. 5: Measures to reduce heating fuel consumption [PDF]
- Ch. 6: Lowering your building’s electric bill [PDF]
Appendices
- App. A: Case studies of costs and savings of heating fuel conversions [PDF]
- App. B: Case studies of efficiency measures [PDF]
- App. C: Getting in touch with Con Edison or National Grid to switch to natural gas [PDF]
- App. D: Recommended residential and commercial building rules that will help reduce usage of heating fuel [PDF]
- App. E: List of NYSERDA contractors that can help a building receive NYSERDA funding, an energy audit and efficiency measures [PDF]
- App. F: Blueprint for an Upper West Side building to switch fuel and increase efficiency [PDF]