Ease Rating: Ambitious
Carbon Emission Savings: 210 kg CO2e per year (Wynes). That's the same as 1.5 loads per week per person at 3,000 watts using the Kalmus model
5 - ~80% target progress (2,000+ kg CO2e)
4 - ~60% (1,000 - 2,000 kg CO2e)
3 - ~20% (500 - 1,000 kg CO2e)
2 - ~10% (100 - 500 kg CO2e)
1 - <10% (<100 kg CO2e)
0 - <1% (<30 kg CO2e)
No. of People Influenced Beyond You: tens of people
Amount of Savings: $$
Impacts: đź’ł Save Money
Categories: Home & Work
Description
Choose air-drying instead of tumble-drying your clothes and make good carbon savings, especially if your energy source for drying is polluting. Hang it on a line outside or a rack inside as often as you can to also save some money on your energy costs.
Plus, no one likes it when clothes develop holes or unravel after lots of laundry cycles. Air-drying helps keep the wear and tear down so your clothes last longer. On top of that, a single dryer can discharge up to 120 million microfibers annually, which is considerably more than from washing machines. These fibers can be irritants if ingested or inhaled, and they are not great if they make their way into our water and soil.
Tips
• Wash clothes on dry, sunny days to help speed up drying.• Use a rack inside during bleaker weather.
• The impact is the greatest if your electricity is powered by polluting sources.
• Proudly fly the laundry flag for your neighbors to see!