Carbon Monoxide Safety
Any burning fuel such as gas, oil, kerosene, wood, or charcoal creates Carbon Monoxide (CO) gas
What is Carbon Monoxide?
- CO is an invisible, odorless gas that is produced by burning wood, charcoal, natural gas, gasoline, propane, oil, methane, and other common fuels. Each year hundreds of people die from carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning. Many of these deaths could have been prevented by installing CO alarms in the home.
- CO is also produced by automobiles and other gasoline or diesel engines. Electrical equipment does not produce carbon monoxide.
- CO enters the body, undetected, through your breathing. CO poisoning can be confused with the flu, food poisoning, or other illness. Symptoms include headache, nausea, dizziness, lightheadedness, or shortness of breath.
- High levels of CO can cause death within just a few minutes. A person can be poisoned by a small amount of CO over a longer period of time or by a large amount of CO over a shorter amount of time.
- Carbon monoxide alarms are not substitutes for smoke alarms. Know the difference between the sound of a smoke alarm and the sound of a CO alarm.
- CO alarms can be battery-powered, plugged into an outlet, or hardwired into a home's electrical system. Buy only CO alarms that bear the label of an independent testing laboratory. Install a CO alarm outside your home's sleeping areas. If sleeping areas are spaced far apart, each area will need a CO alarm.
- If the CO warning signal sounds, immediately go to a fresh air location and call for help. Stay at the fresh air location until emergency personnel tell you it is safe. If the trouble signal sounds, check for low batteries or other problems.
- When you are buying home heating or cooking equipment, purchase only products that bear the label of an independent testing laboratory. Have all fuel-burning appliances (furnaces, stoves, space heaters, dryers, and water heaters) professionally installed and maintained.
- If you need to warm a vehicle, remove it from the garage immediately after starting it. Do not run a vehicle, generator, or other fueled engine or motor indoors, even if garage doors are open. Make sure the exhaust pipe of a running vehicle is not covered with snow.
- Never use an oven to heat your home. Make sure your wood or coal-burning stove is properly ventilated directly into the chimney flue. Be sure the chimney flue is fully open when you use your fireplace. Have all chimneys cleaned and inspected once a year.
- Have your fuel-burning home heating system (fireplaces, furnaces, water heaters, wood and coal stoves) - including the flue- inspected by a professional before each heating season.
- Keep dryer, stove, furnace, and fireplace vents clear of ice, snow, dirt, leaves, and other debris.