
Chimneys need a clean sweep
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:

SAVOIE CHIMNEY SWEEP SANDY JARDINE IS KEPT BUSY IN THE THREE VALLEYS, BUT SAYS THAT TOO MANY PEOPLE DO NOT GET THE WORK DONE AND AT LEAST ONE CHALET A YEAR WILL BE LOST IN A FIRE Having your
chimney cleaned is not just a good way to get your fire to burn more efficiently and safely – it is also a legal requirement that should be done once or twice a year by a professional
sweep. Blocked chimneys are blamed for many fires and especially for carbon monoxide poisoning (which kills 300 people a year) with a build-up of soot and tar – and sometimes bird nests –
which stop fires or boilers burning well and can catch fire. There is no national law on getting the chimney swept – _ramonage_ – just local prefectoral or municipal regulations but the vast
majority say it should be done twice a year for coal and wood fires or oil boilers; once at the beginning of the season and once during the winter. Gas boilers only need the flue cleaned
once. Over-the-counter chemicals are said to clean the chimneys but they are nothing like as efficient as the sweep’s brush (or _hérisson_, hedgehog in French) – and the sweep also provides
a certificat de ramonage which, while having no monetary value itself, is invaluable in dealing with insurance claims. Not getting the chimney swept is a Category 3 offence that could lead
to a €450 fine – but the consequences could be much more severe in the case of a house fire, with the insurance company reducing any pay-out if there is no certificat de ramonage and also
the very real possibility of someone dying. British sweep Sandy Jardine in Bozel, Savoie, said some insurers only specified one _ramonage_ on policies but if the small print says it should
be done in “accordance with RSDT” it means in line with règlement sanitaire départemental type local rules – twice a year. He said: “Few people get it done twice a year but a chimney fire
can cause a lot of damage – or destroy the building. If a chimney goes up it needs to be inspected afterwards as 1,000C heat can damage stone. “I regularly get people who come to me the year
after their chimney went up and want it checked... and then they get it swept regularly.” The cost of ramonage varies across the country but is generally from €40 to €70 and will be double
for boilers as they have more nooks and crannies to be cleaned. Chimneys or flues are designed to withstand heat and remove toxic gases from the living area so they need to draw air through
the appliance and out to the open air. Cleaning the chimney improves this “draw” and gives better efficiency but as materials age the chimney may need work to ensure it remains fireproof.
This can be done with the use of a flue “insert” which is airtight and fireproof. Sandy, of _3vRamonage_, trained in the UK but the _Chambre de Métier_ said he had to do a three-week
specialist Costic course in Paris to have French qualifications. He was only the second Briton to do the course but he said other sweeps could use at least three years’ UK experience as
equivalent. In Paris and Ile-de-France it could be the last sweep needed for many people as open fires are to be banned in Paris and more than 400 communes from January 1, 2015.