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

8 June 2005

Over 80% of local authorities support Real Nappy Week 2005

Over 390 local authorities are supporting Real Nappy Week 20-26 June 2005. Now in its ninth year, this vital waste prevention campaign has never been more widespread. There are activities planned the Midlands and the rest of the UK, as well as in Ireland, New Zealand and Mexico.

Real Nappy Week is the annual focus of the real nappy campaign, funded by WRAP (the Waste & Resources Action Programme) and co-ordinated by Women’s Environmental Network (WEN) working with the Real Nappy Campaign. The aim is to engage with parents nationwide to help them make an informed choice about real nappies and single-use disposables. The Real Nappy Campaign will deliver a national educational programme of activity to raise awareness of washable real nappies, which will be supported throughout the week by regional and local activities across the UK co-ordinated by WEN.

WRAP director Phillip Ward says, "Local activities and events have been organised throughout the UK to give parents-to-be and new parents a chance to find out all they need to make an informed choice about what type of nappies to use. Real nappies reduce waste - that's what Real Nappy Week is all about."

There are plenty of opportunities for parents to see for themselves what real nappies are really like. There will be nappy roadshows in Bakewell, Swadlincote, Derby, Coalville, Chester and Congleton; Nappuccino coffee mornings in Belper, Ashbourne, Birstall, Macclesfield, Chester, Nuneaton and Atherstone; promotional displays and information days in Chesterfield, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Burton-on-Trent, Kidderminster, Telford, Leamington Spa, West Bromwich, Sutton Coldfield, Hinkley and across Leicestershire. To find out what is happening in your area visit www.wen.org.uk/rnw/whats_on.htm

Local authorities promote real nappy use to reduce the amount of waste going to scarce landfill space. Nearly three billion nappies a year - eight million a day - are thrown away in the UK.

“Real nappies put parents in control,” says WEN’s Elizabeth Hartigan. “All nappies have an environmental impact, but by washing nappies at home parents could save waste, save money and help the environment. The only way to reduce the environmental impact of disposables is to use fewer nappies, but that is not a good idea. Simply by adopting a sensible washing routine, parents could reduce the effect their babies’ nappies have on the environment."

The Real Nappy Helpline 0845 850 0606 gives callers details of their local cloth nappy contacts whether they want to buy them to wash at home or use a laundry service. For more information on real nappies visit www.realnappycampaign.com

Ends
Further media information: visit www.realnappycampaign.com, or contact Laura Jansen or Naomi Westland, Women’s Environmental Network, Tel: 020 7481 9004. Email: nappies3@wen.org.uk, comms2@wen.org.uk

Notes to editors:
Environment: Many parents use just 20-24 nappies. Washing them at 60oC in an energy efficient washing machine saves 24% global warming impact over that suggested in the Environment Agency report – Life Cycle Assessment of reusable and disposable nappies May 2005.

Waste: Britain throws away about eight million nappies a day. With a disposal cost to individual local authorities in hundreds of thousands of pounds per year (Nottinghamshire estimates £1 million per year) it is not surprising that nappy schemes now play a key role in local authorities’ waste strategies.

Cost: WEN estimates that washing nappies at home could save parents around £500 even taking all the electricity and detergent costs into account. Use the nappies for more children and the savings could be even greater. Hospitals can save money too by using real nappies on wards where disposables incur clinical waste charges. Local authorities save on waste disposal charges.

Modern nappies have advanced considerably over recent years. They are shaped and fitted and fastened without the need for pins. They come in a variety of styles and patterns. A biodegradable liner can be used inside the nappy and this can be removed so that the contents are flushed down the loo. Nappy washing services make things even easier, collecting dirty nappies and leaving fresh clean ones in their place.

Women’s Environmental Network (WEN)
is a registered charity which 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. Other current issues include food, chemicals and the environmental impacts of disposable sanitary and continence protection. www.wen.org.uk email nappies@wen.org.uk tel: 020 7481 9004 fax: 020 7481 9144

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, re-use and recycling.
WRAP has laid down targets across fifteen programmes. Twelve are focused on market development, and comprise nine material streams (Paper, Plastics, Glass, Wood, Organics, Aggregates, Tyres, Plasterboard and Batteries) 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. More information on all of WRAP’s programmes can be found at www.wrap.org.uk.

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.

Information on all of WRAP’s activities is available at www.wrap.org.uk and details of its Recycle Now campaign can be found at www.recyclenow.com. For more information on WEN’s campaigns go to www.wen.org.uk


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