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Change the way you wash your hair to help save the environment

Change the way you wash your hair to help save the environment
Change the way you wash your hair to help save the environment
When you hear about businesses with a high environmental impact or activities with a high carbon footprint, you are probably more likely to imagine heavy machinery, engines and oil rather than hairdressing. Yet hairdressing, both as a sector and as an individual activity, can have a massive carbon footprint.

Hairdressing uses high levels of hot water, energy and chemicals. Similarly, in our homes, heating hot water is typically the most energy intensive activity. For the cost of a ten-minute shower that uses an electric immersion heater, you could leave a typical television on for 20 hours.

So while it helps to turn lights and appliances off, the real gains in terms of reducing energy usage are in slashing our use of hot water. A quarter of UK emissions are residential and, of those, the vast majority come from running hot water. The longer it runs and the hotter it is, the more energy intensive (and costly) it is.
The Conversation
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5
Baden, Denise
daad83b9-c537-4d3c-bab6-548b841f23b5

Denise Baden (Author) (2019) Change the way you wash your hair to help save the environment The Conversation

Record type: Website

Abstract

When you hear about businesses with a high environmental impact or activities with a high carbon footprint, you are probably more likely to imagine heavy machinery, engines and oil rather than hairdressing. Yet hairdressing, both as a sector and as an individual activity, can have a massive carbon footprint.

Hairdressing uses high levels of hot water, energy and chemicals. Similarly, in our homes, heating hot water is typically the most energy intensive activity. For the cost of a ten-minute shower that uses an electric immersion heater, you could leave a typical television on for 20 hours.

So while it helps to turn lights and appliances off, the real gains in terms of reducing energy usage are in slashing our use of hot water. A quarter of UK emissions are residential and, of those, the vast majority come from running hot water. The longer it runs and the hotter it is, the more energy intensive (and costly) it is.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 February 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 February 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 439554
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/439554
PURE UUID: 54bcd67f-d46a-468d-8946-858414393164
ORCID for Denise Baden: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2736-4483

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Date deposited: 27 Apr 2020 16:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:47

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