Cloth nappies cost between £100-£400 as opposed to disposable at £800-£1,200 for the 2.5 years of normal nappy use. 3 billion nappies are thrown away in.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Carbon Foot Printing for Textile Industries
Advertisements

Knowaste in The United Kingdom. Knowaste The worlds first provider of a recycling solution for absorbent hygiene products (AHPs) Disposable Nappies, Adult.
Recycling water bottles
Waste in Fashion. Our clothes are getting cheaper, they follow fashion more rapidly and were buying more and more of them. At the same time we hear more.
Introduction to Real Nappies. What are Real Nappies? Made from fabric Washable Reusable There are 3 parts to a Real Nappy: Absorbency ‘nappy’ Stay dry.
A ‘rubbish’ lesson.. What does it cost our families? In Ipswich refuse is collected from over 55,000 domestic properties every week. The cost of collecting.
Waste.
A really rubbish lesson St Mary’s High School Eco Committee Present.
Save our planet Waste / Rubbish Energy Save water.
Embedding sustainability in the curriculum: Practising what we teach London South Bank University 12 th March 2013.
A Quarter of a Century of Responsible Growth Ramez Farag Company Communications Manager Middle-East & Pakistan.
Solid Waste and Recycling
Nappies: The impact of our choices 1. 2 Most babies use disposable nappies A new-born needs about 8 nappies a day On average a baby needs at least 5 clean.
How Recycling Helps By: Student Name. Aluminum Recycling Facts An aluminum can that is thrown away will still be a can 500 years from now! There is no.
S1 Geography Sustainability: An Introduction 1. S USTAINABLE D EVELOPMENT T OPIC 1- S USTAINABILITY : WHAT DOES IT MEAN ? By the end of topic 1 you should.
Hydrogen Bonding Learning intention
Textiles and the environment Textiles products have a large impact on the environment as energy and resources are used in production, and waste is produced.
Recycling Factoid 1: The energy saved from recycling one can is enough to power a television for 3 hours.
Margaret Mead “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”
Waste The U.S. produces 11 billion tons of waste per year. Industrial waste –about 400 million metric tons per year in the U.S. Municipal Waste- A combination.
Recycling Polymers Revise designer polymers
Disposal of Sanitary Napkin. It happens to us 14,66,17,293 girls and women Why is a normal vital process of human existence –Menstruation - considered.
What happens to plastic bottles when we throw them away?
Earth Week 2010 Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Repeat, Rejoice RECYCLE.
Solid Waste & Recycling By: Shannon Reece.
Earth Day! Reduce Reuse Recycle The 3 R's April 22, 2013.
Waste.
Exit How much do you know about waste? See how far you can get in our ‘rubbish’ quiz. Click Here.
Lesson 1.10 Polymer problems Lesson Outcomes APP AF1,AF3,AF4 HSW 2b,2c,3a How I didTargets Task 1: Explain that many polymers are non-biodegradable. Grade.
Dissecting Diapers Experiment # 1. State the Problem How do disposable diapers work?
Written by Emil L. Decker May Over 375 million empty toner & ink cartridges are thrown into the trash every year in the US. Most of these end up.
Recycle Clothing By: Brynn Denniston and Makenzie Paszek.
Recycling Energy and waste management. Types of recycling  Closed loop recycling: plastic bottles becoming new plastic bottles; when the material collected.
Food Waste… A Recipe for Disaster!. Recipe for Disaster!
My Carbon Footprint Recycling By Jake Guglielmino.
Waste and Waste Management. What is waste? Anything that is no longer useful and is thrown away because it is broken, spoiled or worn out – could be food,
Solid Waste: The Throwaway Society
Recycle! Keep the Blue Sky Blue And the Green Grass Green!
The Environmental Impact of the Christmas holiday season.
Ben and Trevor Life Cycle of a Book. Design We investigated the life cycle of a book. The materials used to make a book include paper,cardboard,and ink.
Plastic material used in daily life. In Plastics, the arrangement of the individual units may be linear or cross linked Linear or lightly cross-linked.
Chapter 4 Land and Soil Resources
Nuclear Power Pollutions Alex Hartley English 12 Mrs. Pugh.
Recycling Program 6 th – 8 th Do Now Activities Are You Bee Green?
Our project Lesson 6 Fun with polymers. Starter The properties of Ms G are: –Female –Teacher –Loud mouth –Dark hair –Pregnant! So what does ‘properties’
Recycling is the process of making new products from used materials. This not only has many benefits for the environment, but also for the future of the.
It's not RUBBISH! Assembly on waste. What is waste? Many of the everyday things we do create waste.
Chemistry XXI Unit 3 How do we predict properties? DISCUSSION Central goal: To make predictions of the physical properties of substances based on their.
By Pedro What This means making less rubbish and not using as much energy. This means we have to find other uses for things instead of throwing them.
Allison Price. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 1 and Step 2.
Waste plastic. How much waste plastic? In the UK, 3.5 million tonnes of plastic packaging is thrown away each year! There are three ways to dispose of.
Recycling may seem like a relatively new concept, but researching who invented recycling shows that for centuries in the past, recycling was a way of.
Our Earth, Our Home A Collection of Earth Facts Smiley Spring Sing 2014.
Human Impact on Ecosystems Chapter 3 Section 1. Human population growth presents challenges.
The UK produces more than 100 million tonnes of waste every year, one tonne is about the weight of a small car. In less than two hours, the waste we produce.
In our school!!!.
The Significance of information
Did you know that… Every day, 5-7 pounds of solid waste is generated for every man, women and child in the state of Texas!
Examples of going green
Textiles PowerPoint for lessons 1 and 2
Disposal of Sanitary Napkin
Material Properties – Paper & Boards
Waste and Disposal.
Hydrogels.
Waste Management Introductory Discussion
Who we are and what we do Deborah Hockney – Project Manager
Personal Care & consumer products Industry
Presentation transcript:

Cloth nappies cost between £100-£400 as opposed to disposable at £800-£1,200 for the 2.5 years of normal nappy use. 3 billion nappies are thrown away in the UK each year with 90% going to landfill. They can take up to 500 years to decompose. Disposables make up 4% of total household waste and up to 50% of that of families with one baby Disposable nappies use up to 5 times more energy to produce than cotton ones – that's including the washing process. Seven million trees are felled every year in Canada and Scandinavia to supply the pulp for disposables sold in the UK.

Nappies use a type of polymer in their lining. Sodium poly(acrylate) absorbs 500 times its own mass of water. One of the Surprising Properties of Polymers

Chemical Background Sodium polyacrylate is a polymer with a molecular weight of over one million! Groups called sodium carboxylate are attached along the backbone.