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Sorry if this has been done but - "old-fashioned reusable nappies damage the environment more than disposables??"

7 replies

Lotster · 28/10/2008 13:42

Really surprised by this:

From The Sunday Times
October 19, 2008

"Blow to image of ?green? reusable nappy"
By Marie Woolf, Whitehall Editor

A government report that found old-fashioned reusable nappies damage the environment more than disposables has been hushed up because ministers are embarrassed by its findings.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has instructed civil servants not to publicise the conclusions of the £50,000 nappy research project and to adopt a ?defensive? stance towards its conclusions.

The report found that using washable nappies, hailed by councils throughout Britain as a key way of saving the planet, have a higher carbon footprint than their disposable equivalents unless parents adopt an extreme approach to laundering them.

To reduce the impact of cloth nappies on climate change parents would have to hang wet nappies out to dry all year round, keep them for years for use on younger children, and make sure the water in their washing machines does not exceed 60C.

The conclusions will upset proponents of real nappies who have claimed they can help save the planet.

Restricted Whitehall documents, seen by The Sunday Times, show that the government is so concerned by the ?negative laundry options? outlined in the report, it has told its media managers not to give its conclusions any publicity.

The report found that while disposable nappies used over 2½ years would have a global warming impact of 550kg of CO2 reusable nappies produced 570kg of CO2 on average. But if parents used tumble dryers and washed the reusable nappies at 90C, the impact could spiral to . 993kg of CO2 A Defra spokesman said the government was shelving plans for future research on nappies.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
BouncingTurtleSkulls · 28/10/2008 13:57

Nowt extreme about 'hang wet nappies out to dry all year round, keep them for years for use on younger children, and make sure the water in their washing machines does not exceed 60C.'
I normally wash mine at 40deg, and I don't have a tumble dryer. A lot of people who I know use cloth do the same. I certainly don't know anyone who washes at 90, apart from every now and again.
The biggest impact of sposies is in the areas where they go to landfill - they can take upto 500 years to degrade.
I'm not convinced byt this report.

Lotster · 28/10/2008 14:42

One thing's for sure, it'll ease the concsience of another few thousand mums who were umming and ahhing over disposables eh?

Probably not very responsible reporting...

OP posts:
WhereWolfTheWildThingsWere · 28/10/2008 14:47

There has already been a thread on that article here, if you are interested.

Interested in this thread?

Then you might like threads about this subject:

TooTIfYouAreScared · 28/10/2008 14:47

BUT reports like these don't take into account the fact that cloth nappies can be passed on to other children.
ALSO, cloth nappies can be recycled as rags when they reach the end of their working life.
Disposable nappies can only go to landfill.

BigBadMouseInHauntedHouse · 28/10/2008 20:39

There have been loads of threads on the new report here for example.

The problem is that people keep posting new threads with this title so possibly further damaging the reputation of cloth nappies if people only read the thread title.

The new report is actually IN FAVOUR of cloth nappies DESPITE not being anywhere near up to date with the cloth nappy market (no bamboo nappies considered, organic cotton nappies are now incredibly popular and readily available). They looked at popular cloth nappies available in 2004 (IIRC) (i.e MEOS, TB originals etc).

phdlife · 28/10/2008 20:48

yeah, all those caveats are what we do, so it's not such a biggie.

plus I always thought the real issue was the nappies' afterlife...

psst BBM, update on my spotty baby thread!

BigBadMouseInHauntedHouse · 28/10/2008 21:11
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