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The winter holidays are
a time for celebration,
and that means more
cooking, home
decorating,
entertaining, and an
increased risk of fire
due to heating
equipment.
Facts &
figures
- In 2004, there
were 200
Christmas tree fires
in U.S. homes,
resulting in 17
injuries and $16
million in direct
property damage. No
deaths were
reported.
- During
2000-2004, an
average 300 home
fires started when
Christmas trees
ignited. These fires
caused an estimated
annual average of 14
civilian deaths, 21
civilian injuries
and $16.8 million in
direct property
damage.
- During 2004, an
estimated 17,200 home
fires started by
candles were
reported to public
fire departments.
These fires resulted
in an estimated 200
civilian deaths,
1,540 civilian
injuries and an
estimated direct
property loss of
$200 million.
- Fourteen percent
of the candle fires
ocurred in December.
This is almost twice
the 8% monthly
average. Christmas
was the peak day for
home candle
fires. Seventeen
percent of the home
fires reported on
Christmas were
started by candles.
- In 14% of the
December candle
fires, the fires
began when a
decoration caught
fire. This was true
in only 5% of the
fires during the
rest of the year.
Source: NFPA's
One-Stop Data Shop
NFPA reports
"Home Candle Fires, "
Marty Ahrens
This report includes an
analysis of causes and
trends in home fires
involving candles,
candle fire frequency in
other occupancies, and
selected published
incident descriptions.
NFPA members: Download
this report for free. (PDF, 202
KB)
All visitors: Download
the executive summary
and table of contents. (PDF,
32 KB)
"Home Heating Fire
Patterns and
Trends," John R. Hall,
Jr.
Analysis of patterns and
trends in all measures
of fire loss for all
types of home heating
equipment and all fuel
and power types,
including leading causes
of ignition. Also
provides data from other
countries and safety
tips.
NFPA members: Download
this report for free. (PDF,
400 KB)
All visitors:
Download the executive
summary and table of
contents for free. (PDF, 48
KB)
"Home Structure Fires
that Began with
Decorations," Marty
Ahrens
This analysis of home
fires beginning with
decorations includes
information on when
these fires occur, area
of origin, recent trends
and causal factors.
NFPA members: Download
this report for free. (PDF,
80 KB)
"Home
Christmas Tree and
Holiday Light Fires,"
Marty Ahrens
This analysis of home
fires beginning with
Christmas tress and
holiday lights includes
information on when
these fires occur, area
of origin, and causal
factors. Also includes
selected published
incident descriptions.
NFPA members: Download
this report for free. (PDF,
135 KB)
All visitors:
Download the executive
summary and table of
contents. (PDF, 24
KB)
Safety tips:
Holiday
decorating & lighting
- Use caution with
holiday decorations
and whenever
possible, choose
those made with
flame-resistant,
flame-retardant or
non-combustible
materials.
- Keep
candles away
from decorations and
other combustible
materials, and do
not use candles to
decorate
Christmas trees.
- Purchase only
lights and
electrical
decorations bearing
the name of an
independent testing
lab, and follow the
manufacturer's
instructions for
installation and
maintenance.
- Carefully
inspect new and
previously used
light strings and
replace damaged
items before
plugging lights in.
Do not overload
extension cords.
- Check your
strands of lights to
determine the number
of strands that may
be connected.
Connect no more than
three strands of
push-in bulbs and a
maximum of 50 bulbs
for screw-in bulbs.
- Always unplug
lights before
replacing light
bulbs or fuses.
- Don't mount
lights in any way
that can damage the
cord's wire
insulation (i.e.,
using clips, not
nails).
- Keep children
and pets away from
light strings and
electrical
decorations.
- Turn off all
light strings and
decorations before
leaving home or
going to bed.
Holiday
entertaining
- Unattended
cooking is the
leading cause of
home fires in the
U.S. When cooking
for holiday
visitors, remember
to keep an eye on
the range.
- If you smoke,
smoke outside.
- Wherever you
smoke, provide
plenty of large,
deep sturdy ashtrays
and check them
frequently.
Cigarette butts can
smolder in the trash
and cause a fire, so
completely douse
cigarette butts with
water before
discarding.
- After a party,
always check on,
between and under
upholstery and
cushions and inside
trash cans for
cigarette butts that
may be smoldering.
- Keep matches and
lighters up high,
out of sight and
reach of children
(preferably in a
locked cabinet).
When smokers visit
your home, ask them
to keep their
smoking materials
with them so young
children do not
touch them.
- Test your smoke
alarms, and let
guests know what
your fire
escape plan is.
NFPA does not
test, label or approve
any products.
Updated: 12/06 |