A new incentive helps Vermonters who are still heating with coal to switch to renewable energy.

The program, designed by the Clean Energy Development Fund, pays 50% of the cost of installing advanced wood heat boilers and furnaces. Residents are eligible for up to $7,000, and businesses can receive up to $27,000 toward the change.

While some are shocked that some Vermonters still burn coal, for others, itโ€™s a way of life. Andrew Perchlik, director of the Clean Energy Development Fund, said he was surprised when he learned there were businesses and individuals still heating with coal.

Perchlik said he spoke to some people who were eager to change what they saw as an antiquated and unclean heating system, but others have a long-standing commitment to coal. Perchlik worked on designing an incentive for people who wanted to switch their heating, but were facing a big bill.

Some businesses still using coal have concerns about where theyโ€™ll be able to buy it in the future.

โ€œWe want to make sure they switch to a local, renewable fuel,โ€ said Perchlik, who promotes advanced wood heat โ€” efficient wood chip and wood pellet boilers and furnaces. These fuels can be obtained locally from trees grown in Vermont.

According to Perchlik, 80 cents of every dollar spent on fossil fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas leaves the state. With locally grown wood, the money remains in Vermont, where it supports the local economy through the purchase of fuel and delivery services. Burning wood also aligns with the departmentโ€™s climate and environmental goals, reducing fossil fuel emissions.

But even with assistance, not everyone wants to switch.

โ€œYou will pry my coal stove from my dead fingersโ€ summed up the response Perchlik got from some coal burners. But, whether theyโ€™re devoted or not, he said, coal is a dying industry.

โ€œI donโ€™t think itโ€™s going to be a reliable fuel to get ahold of in the future,โ€ he said.

โ€˜Young people donโ€™t have any interestโ€™

As fewer people buy coal, itโ€™s harder for companies who provide it to stay in business. Ted Chabott โ€” based in Keene, N.H., just 15 miles from the Vermont border โ€” had been selling and delivering coal for 50 years, as well as repairing old boilers and stokers when they broke down. His father had purchased the family business in 1949.

But in recent years, Chabott said, he was steadily losing business. Longtime customers were dying off, he said, and โ€œyoung people donโ€™t have any interest in burning coal.โ€

Two years ago, Chabott lost his last two commercial accounts. One was a building in Brattleboro, Vt., with five stores downstairs and 30 apartments on the upper stories. The building burned 40 tons of coal a year, according to Chabott.

The other was an apartment building in Putney, Vt., that burned about 20 tons of coal a year. Both of those commercial accounts switched to burning oil after installing new heating systems.

In June, Chabott decided to close his company for good.

โ€œI still like delivering coal, but as the customers die down itโ€™s not worth it anymore,โ€ he said. He still had 20 customers, he said, but most were ready to switch to gas or pellet stoves.

Oh, those pails of ash

As the coal industry burns out, people turn to alternatives, and wood is one of them.

โ€œThereโ€™s controversy over it,โ€ said Jim Van Valkenburgh, who works at Froling Energy, a Keene business that specializes in wood heat systems. Some go as far as calling trees the new coal, but Van Valkenburgh says that isnโ€™t a fair comparison.

โ€œWeโ€™re using forests in a sensible way, a renewable way that has continued for decades,โ€ he said.

For Valkenburgh, burning fossil fuels is a โ€œdead-end street,โ€ and burning coal also involves a lot of work. A coal boiler needs to be fed coal on a regular basis so it burns continuously, and pails of ash have to be hauled out by hand.

That was David Mishkinโ€™s problem with the coal boiler that he used to use to heat his log cabin in Moretown, Vt.

โ€œMost people who burn fossil fuels donโ€™t have to think about it,โ€ Mishkin said. โ€œI was knee-deep in it.โ€

Mishkin applied to the coal changeover program and is โ€œvery excitedโ€ to use a new wood-pellet boiler this winter. Mishkin and his wife bought the home in 2017, and it came with a coal boiler that the previous owner had installed in 2011.

โ€œThe worst part about the coal was emptying the ash bucket and loading the hopper,โ€ Mishkin said. In the winter, he said, โ€œwe couldnโ€™t leave the house for more than a day or two without this thing going out.โ€

Thatโ€™s a problem for businesses that heat with coal, too. When Sam Hooper bought Vermont Glove in 2018, the 1920s manufacturing building in Randolph came with a coal boiler that required a lot of labor.

โ€œWe had to dump the ash bucket every morning and night. No matter whether it was the weekend,โ€ he said. Plus, there was coal soot in the building, and Hooper worried about the health of his employees.

The building was cold and coal was expensive, so heating cost Vermont Glove about $14,000 a year for 28 tons of coal. After a switch to a wood pellet boiler, the cost is down to $3,500 to $4,000 a year.

Changing over to cleaner heat was a big expense for a business that lives โ€œhand to mouth,โ€ Hooper said, but he expects to see a return on investment of about $50,000 within three to four years after installation.

Vermont Glove worked with the state to secure grant money and other incentives to help cover some costs of the wood-pellet boiler, and based partially on the success of the changeover, the state continues to look for incentives for businesses and individuals to change out coal heaters.

โ€œWeโ€™re so much happier now,โ€ Hooper said.

Stephen Dotson, Brattleboroโ€™s sustainability coordinator, said the timing of the incentive program might present a challenge for businesses that have to prioritize spending to keep buildings in compliance with COVID-19 recommendations. Right now, he said, โ€œfinancing things feels very precarious,โ€ especially for businesses such as multi-unit buildings that are cash-poor to begin with.

The coal change-out program runs until next June, or until the money runs out.