7
August 2001
Don't be fooled by disposable nappy industry's environmental
impact claims:
WEN takes manufacturers to ASA
The
Women's Environmental Network has lodged a complaint with the Advertising
Standards Authority against disposable nappy manufacturers for claiming
that there is nothing to choose between the environmental impact of disposable
and washable nappies.
WEN's complaint says Procter & Gamble, one of the biggest manufacturers,
is also flouting a 1992 ASA ruling by backing The Absorbent Hygiene Products
Manufacturers Association (AHPMA), which has made the claim in a leaflet
aimed at new parents. WEN wants the leaflet withdrawn and calls on the
ASA to ban the AHPMA or its members from making such claims in future.
The leaflet, published under the guise of the 'Nappy Information Service'
has been widely circulated to health professionals, hospitals and doctors'
surgeries and to local authority waste or environment managers.
Maeve Murphy, WEN's Real Nappy Project officer, said: "The Nappy
Information Service leaflet published by the UK disposables industry is
a blatant example of greenwash(1) masquerading as
public information. Parents should not be fooled by it - disposable nappies
use more resources and create far more waste than cloth nappies, even
when washing is taken into account.
"Doctors, midwives and health visitors have a duty to offer parents
balanced and accurate information on the range of nappy systems available,
and should not be duped into thinking this leaflet satisfies that need,
when it is nothing more than a marketing ploy."
The
1992 ASA ruling, which followed a WEN-commissioned independent critique
of two 1991 Procter and Gamble-funded lifecycle analyses of nappies(2),
prevents Procter & Gamble from claiming that the environmental impact
of disposable nappies is not materially worse than that of cloth nappies.
It adds that P&G must include a warning that their claims of similar
environmental impact were simply one side of an ongoing argument and should
not imply that the results of their 1991 study were generally accepted.
Yet the leaflet and an associated website ignore the latest evidence that
disposables have a far greater impact on resources, even when washing
is taken into account. Instead they refer to manufacturers' own environmental
comparisons between disposable and cloth nappies as fact; they do not
present them as one side of an argument as they have been advised to do.
A 1998 study by Best Foot Forward, an independent organisation recognised
as experts in 'ecological footprinting'(3) compared
disposable, home laundered and service laundered nappies. Footprinting
is a recognised method of calculating the amount of land required to provide
the resources and to absorb the wastes of all sorts of activities. It
looks at the whole lifecycle of a product from its manufacture, through
its use, to disposal. All materials, energy, water etc. used and residues
created at any stage in the process are taken into consideration.
Best Foot Forward carried out comparative footprinting analysis of disposable
and washable nappies with the following results.
Comparative
footprints for nappies required, laundered and disposed of
for one baby over one year |
Nappy system
Laundry service
Home laundered nappies
Disposable nappies
|
Environmental
Footprint
1,600 sqm
2,300 sqm
4,300 sqm |
This
study concludes that disposable nappies have almost twice (1.8 times)
the environmental impact of home laundered nappies and over two and
a half times (2.6 times) that of service laundered nappies.
For
further information please contact:
Maeve Murphy 020 7481 9004, Fax: 020 7481 9144 or email: nappies@wen.org.uk
Notes to editors
1.
'Greenwash': questionable statements put out by major companies or governments
to make them sound more environmentally friendly than they are or to
hide unpalatable facts.
2. In 1991, two major lifecycle analysis studies of nappies,
by separate consultants, Lentz and Little, had been published; both
funded by Procter and Gamble. They concluded that there was very little
difference in the overall environmental impact between disposable and
reusable nappies. The Women's Environmental Network commissioned a critique
of the two studies from the Landbank Consultancy. Landbank examined
the impacts of both nappying systems from the growing or extraction
of raw materials, to the nappies' use and disposal. Landbank found that
both Lentz and Little had concentrated on the use stage, where reusable
nappies have the greatest impacts, to the exclusion of other stages
such as manufacture and disposal. Landbank used the raw data from the
two studies and additional public information on process impacts, to
recalculate the impacts of the two different systems. The results are
shown below:
Disposable nappies use
3.5 times more energy, 8 times more non-renewable raw materials,
90 times more renewable material
than washable nappies.
Disposable nappies produce
2.3 times more wastewater, 60 times more solid waste
than washable nappies.
Disposable nappies require
between 4 and 30 times more land for growing natural materials as
reusable nappies.
The study also showed that the manufacture of both nappy systems use
similar amounts of fossil fuel energy.
3. Footprinting. Details of the study are published in Sharing
Nature's Interest: ecological footprints as an indicator of sustainability
by Chambers, Simmons and Wackernagel, published by Earthscan, November
2000. For more information please visit www.bestfootforward.com
4. WEN is a national membership organisation which campaigns
on environmental and health issues from a women's perspective. Founded
in 1988, it aims to educate, inform and empower women and men who care
about the environment.
5. WEN's Real Nappy Project is funded by a £55,000 grant
from Biffaward, a multi-million pound scheme set up by Biffa
Waste Services, using donations of more than £4 million annually
from qualifying contributions under the landfill tax regulations. WEN
believes parents should have a fair choice and has no commercial interest
in any particular type of nappy.
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