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.
Mostly the hot water used carries a high carbon footprint, but the chemicals in shampoo don't help either.
(Score: 2) by stretch611 on Tuesday February 12 2019, @07:23PM (1 child)
Instead of taking less showers, share the resources, shower with your significant other.
Now with 5 covid vaccine shots/boosters altering my DNA :P
(Score: 3, Touché) by maxwell demon on Tuesday February 12 2019, @08:38PM
And how is showering with imaginary people supposed to save resources? ;-)
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.