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Remember that a candle is an open flame. It can easily ignite any
combustible nearby.
Facts and figures
- During 2002,
an estimated 18,000 home fires started by candles were reported to
public fire departments. These fires resulted in an estimated 130
civilian deaths, 1,350 civilian injuries and an estimated direct
property loss of $333 million. Homes include one- and two-family
dwellings, apartments and manufactured housing.
- The estimated
number of home candle fires was unchanged from 2001 to 2002. For
the first time since 1991, the number of home candle fires has
stabilized rather than increasing.
- Candle fires
accounted for an estimated 5% of all reported home fires.
- Two-fifths
(40%) of the home candle fires started in the bedroom, resulting in
30% of the associated civilian deaths.
- Reported home
candle fires have more than tripled since the low of 5,500 in 1990.
- December had
almost twice the number of home candle fires of an average month.
- Half (50%) of
home candle fires occurred when some form of combustible material
was left or came too close to the candle; Eighteen percentoccurred
after candles were left unattended, abandoned or inadequately
controlled; Five percent were started by people (usually children)
playing with the candle.
- Falling
asleep was a factor in 12% of home candle fires and 25% of the home
candle fire deaths.
- Christmas Day
was the peak day of the year for home candle fires in 1999-2002. New
Year's Day and Christmas Eve tied for second.
Source: National
estimates based on NFIRS and NFPA survey.
Safety tips:
- Extinguish
all candles when leaving the room or going to sleep.
- Keep candles
away from items that can catch fire, like clothing, books and
curtains.
- Use candle
holders that are study, won’t tip over easily, are made from a
material that cannot burn, and are large enough to collect dripping
wax.
- Keep candles
and all open flames away from flammable liquids.
- Keep candle
wicks trimmed to one-quarter inch and extinguish taper and pillar
candles when they get to within two inches of the holder. Votives
and containers should be extinguished before the last half-inch of
wax starts to melt.
- During power
outages, avoid carrying a lit candle. Use flashlights.
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