good 

New Zealand’s guide to sustainable living

Subscribe

Article illustration

Air-dryer vs paper towels

Home » Magazine » Good, issue 1 » Good start » Air-dryer vs paper towels

It’s the classic public loo dilemma. Air-dryers are slow, noisy and seem to burn through electricity. But that bin overflowing with damp paper towels is going straight to landfill. What’s a soul with wet hands and good intentions to do?

Unfortunately for those of us who hate the things, the air-dryer gets the green thumbs up. That was the conclusion of a recent lifecycle analysis by US environmental consultancy ERM, which pitted a 30-second blow-dry against the use of two paper towels.

The air-dryer was found to have less than half the global warming burden of the paper towels, over a five-year lifespan. That’s because paper towels take energy to manufacture, transport and remove—and they can’t be recycled, because they’ve just been contaminated by your freshly washed paws. New Zealand’s higher proportion of renewable electricity increases the air-dryer’s advantage even further.

One thing in paper’s favour: towels are more hygienic than hot air. If you’re not ready to sacrifice a satisfying hand-wipe, insist on recycled paper towels and halve your impact by using only one towel instead of two.

Better than paper towels, though still not as good as air-dryers, are those continuous cloth loop contraptions. Despite being laundered at a ridiculous 150°C, they still use only about 10% of the energy required to manufacture paper towels, and about 13% as much water—including their frequent washing.

Confused? We prefer to avoid the decision entirely and wipe our hands on our trousers or spruce up our hair. If that grosses you out (fair enough) make like 100 million Japanese and carry a handkerchief or facecloth especially for drying your hands.

Add your comment

Anonymous comments are queued before publishing and it may take some time before they appear. Please consider creating an account and your comment will appear automatically. If you already have an account, please log in.








If you have trouble reading the code, click on the code itself to generate a new random code
 

More Goodness

The Good blog
  • Treetops is tops

    We picked a winner with this one: Treetops Lodge, featured in our first issue, has just been named the best hotel in New Zealand by Travel + Leisure magazine in the US

  • Happy holidays!

    Good's taking a well-deserved break for the next couple of weeks, so there'll be no blogging from us for a while.

    Thanks very much for reading the mag this year—we really, really appreciate your support and feedback.

    Here's to a happy and safe Christmas holiday, great weather and an excellent 2009 for all of us.

  • Thank you Peter Dunne
    article illustration

    Having a moan to an MP is not only cathartic, it's effective. But it's just as important to let politicians know you support them when they done good. Sometimes they even write back!

    Plus: Peak oil is really real, says everyone.

Good magazine
Good Cause
article illustration

Latest issue

Save our species! Aotearoa is losing its wildest inhabitants—and it's not only tuatara in trouble. Issue 4 of Good profiles 10 critters in crisis, and what you can do to help them. Plus: A million-dollar house ... for free.

Go MAD

Intrepid Volunteers Challenge
GoMad

To celebrate and support New Zealand’s volunteers, Good magazine and Intrepid Travel have created the Intrepid Volunteers Challenge (gomad.co.nz) and social networking site, so charities and volunteers like you can connect and bring change.

The big idea is simply to reward our unsung heroes and make it easier for new volunteers to find a project that suits them. The Intrepid Volunteer of the Year will win a $5,000, all-expenses-paid Intrepid Travel volunteering holiday to any destination in the world, with spending money from Good magazine.

 

Latest comments

  • Brenda on Greenwash spotting:
    Alas they're only guidelines. - with worlds like "encourage to be honest" and "should explain". The commerce commision has no teeth.
  • Westmere Westie on Crafty cool:
    Kraftbomb is another great craft event at the Grey Lynn Community Centre on 21st of December. I attended the last one and there was heaps of  
  • Annabel McAleer on Slip, slop, slap ... safe?:
    Thanks Chris, happy to help! Just to clarify, it's definitely exposure to the sun that causes melanoma. As far as I know there is no scienti  
  • Chris on Slip, slop, slap ... safe?:
    Thank you for this informative article!  With skin cancer being such a big concern I always wondered - was it the sun (which is complet  
Good is Totally Cool

Carbon Neutral, Totally Cool
Read the report

Sponsored by

TelstraClear