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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.
NFPA does not test, label or
approve any products.
Updated: 8/05 |
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