The Laundry Room: Make it Green
Excerpted with permission from Raising Baby Green: The Earth-Friendly Guide to Pregnancy, Childbirth and Baby Care by Jossey-Bass, A John Wiley & Sons Imprint.
For such a little person, a baby sure goes through a lot of laundry: diapers, bibs, sleepers, undershirts, blankets, sheets, socks, pants . . . and of course all the items the baby spits up on that also need to be cleaned—often. That’s why having a baby in the house turns the mundane washer and dryer into wonder machines of incredible convenience. This increase in laundry loads is also a good reason for you to focus your green efforts on the laundry room.
The Green Washing Machine
If you’re buying a new washer, remember to look for Energy Star models. Traditional top-loading washing machines use about forty gallons of water per load, whereas Energy Star washers use only about 25 gallons per load. That’s a 40 percent savings in water, which translates into an energy cost savings of almost 50 percent.10Make that new machine a front-loader. Front-loading machines work on a horizontal axis that saves both water and energy. A top-loading machine must be filled with water in order to keep the clothing wet and then an agitator swirls the water around, but a front-loading machine uses less water because the tub does not need to be filled completely; the tub itself rotates, making the clothes tumble in the water.
These machines also reduce the energy needed for drying clothes because they spin clothes faster than top-loading machines, which reduces the moisture level before the clothes even enter the dryer. As an extra green bonus, front-loading washers are kinder to your clothing, so your clothes last longer. In comparison to top-loading washing machines, the front-loaders use 50 percent less energy and a third less water. With those savings, it will pay for itself in six years and should last for ten. In addition, a front-loading Energy Star washer will save enough energy annually to light your entire home for a month and a half, and it saves as much water in a year as the average person drinks in a lifetime.
Laundry Detergent
While you’re looking for ways to go green in the laundry room, don’t overlook your detergent. You’ll find that it’s easy to make the switch to green detergents that are plant based (corn, palm kernel, or coconut oil) and to non-chlorine-bleach products made from sodium percarbonate or sodium perborate. For those laundry tasks that require special attention, think simple and homemade. • For stains, try soaking fabrics in water mixed with one of the following:Borax, lemon juice, hydrogen peroxide, or white vinegar.
• For fabric softening, add a quarter cup of baking soda to the wash cycle.
• For static cling, add a quarter cup of white vinegar to the wash water.
• To soften water, use a soap-based, rather than detergent-based, cleaner.
• Buy laundry products in containers that are recyclable. There are very good reasons for making the switch to a green product. Most conventional laundry detergents are made from petroleum— a nonrenewable resource. They don’t readily biodegrade, and they threaten wildlife after they go down the drain. Many also contain chemical fragrances and phosphates (which build up in streams and lakes, upset the natural balance, and starve fish of the oxygen they need to survive). They also contain chemicals linked to cancer and reproductive problems. That’s just plain bad for the earth and for your family.
Chlorine bleach should also be banned from your laundry room. This popular whitener and disinfectant is highly caustic; when it goes from your drain into the natural world, it can create organochlorines, which are suspected carcinogens as well as reproductive, neurological, and immune system toxins. They also damage the earth’s ozone layer.
Washing and Drying Tips to Try Today
· When you have several loads to wash, do them back-to-back so you can use the residual heat in the dryer.
· Run the washing machine only when you have a full load.
· Wash with cold water to save 80 to 90 percent of the energy costs of washing.
· To prevent static cling, add one cup white vinegar to the rinse cycle, using your washing machine’s dispenser. Static cling, by the way, is caused by using synthetic fabrics, so you could also switch to cotton. The vinegar also kills bacteria and prevents the buildup of detergent residue. Remove the laundry before it’s overdried.
· Clean out the dryer’s lint trap after every load to improve circulation and reduce energy use.
· Air dry whenever possible using indoor racks or an outdoor line. This conserves energy—and your clothes. They will not wear out or fade as quickly. (You’ll also save about seven hundred pounds of carbon dioxide over six months of warm weather.)
· Remove clothing from the dryer before the cycle ends and line dry to finish. This conserves energy and increases the life span of the clothing.
· Avoid using dryer sheets to soften fabrics. They often contain harsh chemicals that can irritate sensitive skin. Soften fabric with baking soda in the wash cycle. Try a commercial green fabric softener like Natural Choices Home Safe Products’ Safe ’n Soft, Ecover’s Natural Fabric Softener, or Sun & Earth’s Ultra Fabric Softener.
© Copyright 2008 by Dr. Alan Greene.








This article is so true. We read about people making their homes “green”- businesses, and even churches are doing the same. But are any of them stopping to look at what cleaning products they are using in their homes, churches or business? I don’t think many of them are! I know of a business that is building a “green” building, but when this person was approached about switching their cleaning products and even personal care products to eco-friendly ones, the idea was obviously not received well. So is all of this a “show” to get attention to their business? Remember the saying “Do as I say, don’t do as I do?” or something like that. Switching to eco-friendly products doesn’t have to be expensive, in fact if it is a concentrated product you can even save money over store name brands! I switched to safer, green products almost 4 years ago, saving landfills of all those plastic bottles, and helping my home and family have better health. (And I am not mixing ingredients to get safer, eco-friendly, green products!)
The problem with SoapNuts is that they cause oily non-removeable spots on your clothes. They also cause white clothing to turn a grayish color. While I continued to use them on my towels before I bought my HE2 washer I avoided using them on my clothes. I still have a huge bag of them which will probably end up in my compost pile before long.
[...] landfills for trash that is difficult to recycle, such as old car seats and bottles that once held bleach or laundry detergent, they also deliver the containers (when you rent them for a buck a week) in a [...]