We
all enjoy dressing ourselves and our families in clean clothing, yet we
may not realize that a staggering 90% of the energy consumed by washing
machines goes into heating the water. Only 10% or so goes to actually
running the machine.
If all the households in America were to
begin washing their clothes in cold water we'd collectively save about
30 million tons of CO2 per year. What's more, we save both energy and
water if we only run the washing machine when we have a full load of
clothes. So if your "whites" pile of laundry
is smaller than your "darks" and "colored" piles, make it a point to
wait to wash them until you have enough to fill your machine.
What You Should Know
- The average American home washing machine is used more than 400 times a year.
- Washing
machines use about 15%-20% of the water in homes that have them. Each
wash cycle uses 32-59 gallons--as much as two showers!
- Few
fabrics need to washed in hot water anymore--grease stains or baby
diapers being obvious exceptions--and while most regular detergent can
handle cold water washes, you may want to try one of the new cold-water
detergents on the market for best results. Try pre-treating oily stains
with a stain stick. For really dirty clothes, selecting a warm pre-soak
cycle followed by cold wash and rinse cycles is still more
energy-efficient than using a hot wash cycle.
Easy Things You Can Do
Experiment with cold water wash and rinse cycles.
For nearly all clothes, the results will be as good as using a hot
water wash and warm rinse, and you'll cut your energy use by half.
Also, by washing in cold water, you can cut carbon dioxide emissions by
up to 500 pounds a year.Always run your washing machines with full loads of laundry to maximize the machine's use of energy and water, and to save you time.
Set the water level in the washing machine to suit the size of the load if you must run a small load of laundry--you'll save both water and energy.
Try washing on a delicate setting instead of regular. The motor won't have to work as hard.Replace your washer with an ENERGY STAR model.Where
standard washers use anywhere from 32 - 59 gallons of water,
ENERGY STAR washers consumer only 18-25 gallons per load, and are
getting more efficient all the time. Be sure to check out the rebates
for energy efficient clothes washers that you may be eligible for
. Sources: 30 Simple Energy Things You Can Do To Save The Earth (Earth Works and PG&E), and TerraPass. Acterra (David Coale)