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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.

Comments

Annabel McAleer
 
Thu February 05, 2009 @ 02:12 PM
Update on air dryers! Dyson's fancy-as air-dryer, the Airblade (it even sounds fast), wins the wet-hand battle, hands down (pun only slightly intended). It only takes 10 seconds, and it uses 75% less energy than other warm air hand dryers.

It's worth going to the loo for at Britomart or the Auckland Airport (mens' loos only), and it's now being installed at Westfield malls all over NZ.  It really is a cool machine... http://www.dyson.com/airblade/nz/
 
Last Edit: February 10, 2009 @ 10:25AM by Annabel McAleer 
Len Halgryn
 
Sat February 28, 2009 @ 02:07 PM

Paper towels remain tops for fitness for purpose, i.e. maintenance of hygiene. Irrespective of green concerns, how green is the risk of contracting Hepatis? Hot air dryers, and particularly the Dyson type requiring insertion of the hands, will inevitably get touched in the drying process: precisely the worst risk of contamination. From me, a big THUMBS DOWN!

Brad
www.lanuova.co.nz
 
Tue May 26, 2009 @ 05:59 AM
Continuous cloth towels are by far the best option. They are the best of both worlds with low impact on the environment compared to paper and are far more hygenic than air towels, some studies even put them as more hygenic than paper. As for the wash temperature they are washed at about 60-70 degrees not the above suggested 150 degrees.

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