Showing posts with label saving energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label saving energy. Show all posts

Washing hands in cold water

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    If like me you are a frequent washer of hands – in my case this being due to my Romani-Gypsy Culture and our People's Cleanliness Laws – then using the hot tap for this purpose would be rather wasteful, both in terms of water and energy. By the time the water reaches the tap, generally, you will have finished washing your hands which means that – one – you have anyway washed, basically, in cold water and – two – and this is the important bit – you have needlessly fired the boiler.

    Most, if not indeed all, soaps, and especially here I have found the handmade varieties such as those from The Littlecote Soap Co in Buckinghamshire, England, work also well in cold water, so there is, therefore, no need to even turn on the hot tap in the first place. Just use the cold one, period.

    Starting a water boiler, whether electric of gas, takes a great amount of energy and if you do not actually get the benefit from the heated water, as you do not, I an sure, want to wait the x-minutes it will take for the hot water to arrive before washing your hands and have completed the washing of your hands generally before the water arriving with you has even turned warm, then all you do is waste this energy used to heat that water.

    Aside from the fact that you are wasting money in doing this you are also increasing your environmental footprint every time that you – needlessly – turn on the hot water tap.

    Cold water hand washing, as you are basically doing anyway – unless you actually wait the x-amount of minutes until the water has turned warm or hot (thereby wasting water and energy) and has arrived with you – is the answer to a greener way of washing your hands.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), June 2008

Post Title

Washing hands in cold water


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/washing-hands-in-cold-water.html


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Wash with cold water and do your bit for the environment

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Setting the temperature on your washing machine to cold or 30 degrees Celsius is a great way to save energy, money, and carbon emissions

    About 90% of all the energy used for washing clothes goes to heating the water, and so, switching to cold water can save you upwards of $100 a year in reduced energy costs.

    In most cases there is no need for washing clothes in hot water. This can also be seen by the way clothes are washed by many peoples in foreign countries, just in the rivers, in cold water.

    I have been doing most, and yes I did say, most, of my laundry on the 30 degree Celsius setting (could not tell you how much energy that may have saved me but...) and have not have any problems whatsoever with the wash as regards to cleanness and such. I do, on occasions, use 95 degree Celsius, the nigh on boiling, setting for the likes of linen, such as bedlinen, just to kill off any little critters – the famous bedbugs, for instance – that may be hiding in there. Otherwise, however, it is 30 degrees and that's it. It works and it helps reducing energy usage, and that, in the end is not just good for the environment but also for my wallet.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), June 2008

Post Title

Wash with cold water and do your bit for the environment


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/wash-with-cold-water-and-do-your-bit.html


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Unplug your chargers when not in use

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    When you're not using your chargers, be it for your mobile telephone, your digital camera, your PDA, your MP3 Player, or what-have-you, unplug them or, if you happen to live in the UK, switch them off at the socket where the charger happens to be plugged in at the wall. If you use a power strip then the “unplug” applies, also in the UK.

    Chargers still use a lot of energy, as they are constantly still actually transforming current, when they are plugged in at the socket. Savings can range from a few pounds a month to hundreds a year depending on how many chargers you have and use and tend to keep plugged in.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), June 2008

Post Title

Unplug your chargers when not in use


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/unplug-your-chargers-when-not-in-use.html


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