Women's Environmental Network Educating, empowering and informing women and men who care about the environment. Campaigning on environmental and health issues from a female perspective.
Press Release

30 March 2006
Nappy fashion hits the catwalk in 10th Anniversary Real Nappy Week

Diary Date: 24-30 April 2006, Real Nappy Week 10th anniversary

Real Nappy fashion shows in Dublin and South Tipperary to mark the 10th Anniversary Real Nappy Week reveal just how far real nappies have come in the last decade. No longer just an eco and economic option, real nappies are now a fashionable lifestyle choice.

The latest in sassy nappy style and high street chic will also be on show in ‘nappuccino’ coffee mornings and displays in Carlow, Down, Limerick and elsewhere in Ireland. Parents will be able to find out what’s available and how they can save money and waste. There will also be a real nappy demonstration on TV3’s Ireland AM, April 18 at 8.10am.

For details of more Real Nappy Week events visit Women’s Environmental Network’s website, www.wen.org.uk. The list is updated as new events are confirmed.

Biba Hartigan of WEN said: ‘There is now such a range that parents can choose real nappies to suit their own personal style. With the new easy-to-use designs, real nappies provide the performance parents demand while giving them a chance to save money and save waste at the same time.’

A record 840 supporters have signed up to back Real Nappy Week 2006, including 85% of Northern Irish and over 90% of all UK councils. Support has also spread as far afield as Australia, Hong Kong, Mexico and New Zealand.

Real Nappy Week is co-ordinated by Women’s Environmental Network (WEN), sponsored in the UK by WRAP (the Waste & Resources Action Programme) through its Real Nappy Campaign and supported by the Waste Aware Scotland campaign.

ENDS

For more media information visit www.wen.org.uk or call Liz Sutton, Biba Hartigan or Suzanne Simmons-Lewis on + 44 (0)20 7481 9004.

Notes to Editors

Women’s Environmental Network (WEN) is a registered charity that campaigns on issues which link women, health and the environment. WEN has been involved in Real Nappy Week since its inception and has coordinated the week in its current form since 2000. Support for the Week has grown year on year: from 116 organisations in 2000, to more than 800 supporters in 2006 – over 90% of all UK local authorities – and hundreds of other organisations, companies and political representatives. Other current WEN issues include food, toxic chemicals and the environmental impacts of disposable sanitary and continence protection.

NAPPY FACTS
Cost

Home laundered nappies could save parents around £500 on the cost of keeping a baby in nappies. You can buy all the nappies and waterproof covers you need for your baby's nappy wearing life on the high street for £50, about the cost of seven weeks’ of disposables.

Health
Disposable nappies are made of superabsorbent chemicals, paper pulp and plastics, while real nappies are mostly made of natural fabrics. Organic cotton and hemp nappies and organic wool waterproof covers are available at a reasonable cost.

Waste
Nearly three billion nappies are thrown away in the UK every year. Most (90%) end up in landfill;
that’s nearly eight million nappies a day. We do not know how long it takes for the plastics in disposable nappies to decompose but it could take hundreds of years.

WRAP (the Waste & Resources Action Programme) is a major UK programme established to promote resource efficiency. Its particular focus is on creating stable and efficient markets for recycled materials and products and removing the barriers to waste minimisation, reuse and recycling.

A not-for-profit company, WRAP is backed by substantial government funding from Defra and the devolved administrations in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

WRAP is currently running fifteen programmes. Twelve relate to market development, comprising nine material streams (paper, plastics, glass, wood, organics, aggregates, tyres, batteries and plasterboard) and three generic areas (business & finance, procurement, and regional market development). Three further programmes relate to the wider resource efficiency remit - collections, communications and awareness, and waste minimisation.

Part of WRAP’s waste minimisation work, the Real Nappy Campaign is an element of the Real Nappy Programme, which is focused on helping parents to make an informed choice about nappies and increasing the visibility of real nappies. Its targets are to convert an additional 155,000 households to real nappy use, and in the process divert 35,000 tonnes per annum of disposable nappy waste from landfill.


More information on all of WRAP’s programmes can be found at www.wrap.org.uk


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