Why you should embrace using cold water, almost all the time - Heating water gobbles energy, leading to higher utility bills and more planet-warming emissions.

By Allyson Chiu
May 12, 2024 at 6:30 a.m. EDT

1716554660298.png
Dermatologists say that washing up with cooler water may be beneficial to your skin. (Robert Alexander/Getty Images)

You may not be giving a second thought to setting your washing machine on the hot cycle, cranking your showers to a steamy temperature or scrubbing your dirty dishes under a stream of scalding water.

If you did, you’d find that you probably don’t need to use so much hot water — and that you could be saving energy and cutting your utility bills. Water heating is responsible for more than 10 percent of both annual residential energy use and consumer utility costs, the biggest share after air conditioning and heating, according to the Energy Department. An American household uses an average of 64 gallons of hot water a day — close to the amount needed to fill an average bathtub — by doing laundry, showering, washing the dishes and running kitchen and bathroom faucets.

While there are home improvements that can help you cut back on the energy it takes to heat water, including installing a heat pump water heater, one easy solution is to switch to cold water.

Here’s where it makes most sense to dial back the heat.

Laundry​

1716554688216.png
Doing laundry in cold water saves money and is good for the environment, says Joe Vukovich, a staff attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council. (Benjamin C Tankersley for The Washington Post)

Washing machines guzzle an average of 25 gallons of hot water per use, according to the Energy Department — the most compared to other common household activities.

“Doing laundry is a big area where using cold water makes a difference,” said Joe Vukovich, a staff attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council who works on energy efficiency.

Water heating also consumes about 90 percent of the energy it takes to operate a washing machine, according to Energy Star. Changing your washer’s temperature setting from hot to warm can cut energy use in half. Washing with cold water can reduce your energy footprint even more.

By washing four out of five loads of laundry in cold water, you could cut 864 pounds of CO2 emissions in a year, an amount equivalent to planting 0.37 acres of U.S. forest, according to the American Cleaning Institute.

Experts encourage using the cold cycle as much as possible. Hot water settings are only really necessary for sanitizing or if your clothes have grease on them. Modern laundry detergents, even those that aren’t marked for cold-water use, are typically formulated to clean just as well at lower temperatures.

“Using cold water for laundry is a great recommendation for everyone,” Vukovich said. “It’s something you can do with little effort or disruption to your life, it saves you money, and it’s good for the environment.”

Bathing​

Showering accounts for roughly 17 percent of the water Americans use in their homes, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Your steamy showers also consume energy: Nearly half of a home’s hot water is used for bathing.

A cold shower not only uses less energy than a hot one, but it also saves water because you don’t have run the tap while you wait for it to heat up, said Jennifer Amann, senior fellow in the buildings program at the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, a nonprofit group. You should also rethink washing your hands with hot or warm water for the same reason, she added.

“If you’re wasting cold water to get your hot water, then you’re really wasting both water and the energy resources,” she said. “Those energy resources still come largely from fossil fuels and so they’re adding to emissions in the environment at a time when we really need to be doing everything we can to reduce carbon emissions.”

Washing up with cooler water could also have additional benefits for your skin, according to dermatologists.

For some people, especially those who have drier skin or skin conditions such as eczema, prolonged exposure to hot water can often do more harm than good, these experts say. Instead of taking long hot showers or baths that can dehydrate your skin, dermatologists recommend showers of no more than 10 minutes, using warm or room-temperature water — or even cold water — which is less drying to skin.

Dishes​

1716554751765.png
A man loads a dishwasher. (Shutterstock)

You don’t need to pre-rinse before loading the dishwasher and experts recommend scraping food remnants off instead. But if you do rinse, make sure to use cold water, Amann said.

“Don’t use hot, that’s just a waste,” she said.

While dishwashers use hot water, energy efficient models need very little, Amann said. Research suggests that even running a half-empty dishwasher can be less resource intensive than washing a few dishes by hand.

“The good news is there are lots of opportunities — just through your own behavior without laying out a lot of money — to reduce your hot water use,” she said.

Source (Archive)
 
And this is why bedbugs, lice and other critters are on the rise. Their eggs and such on clothing and bedding can only be destroyed via washing on hot settings, cold water does nothing to them (even with detergents and other things either). Their populations were pretty low back in the days of hotter wash settings, but ever since the 'wash at lower for the environment', they have had a population explosion, to levels normally only seen in 3rd world countries.
It’s probably one driver for eczema and skin issues too. If you have skin problems you should use cooler water for your skin, but hotter for your clothes - bacteria are a significant cause of eczema and skin problems.
There are good reasons to wash some clothing and items on hot. I always hot wash sheets, and towels.
Also your washing machine WILL develop biofilms, which tallow bacteria to breed.
Hot water, soap and sunlight get rid of a lot of nasties. Metaphorically as well as literally
 
Listen, i tried cold showers for a month.
The only thing that changed is that i was still dirty when i got out of the shower. The difference was immediately noticeable after i took my first hot shower after that month.
Night and day difference. Also hot showers feel good and, since i'm on kiwifarms, if you take cold showers because of the supposed benefits you're an insecure faggot and possibly a redditard too.
 
Obligatory reminder that the modern idea of individual footprints started as a literal BP psy-op and as such anyone who advocates for them should unironically be fucking shot:
In 2005, fossil fuel company BP hired the large advertising campaign Ogilvy to popularize the idea of a carbon footprint for individuals. The campaign instructed people to calculate their personal footprints and provided ways for people to "go on a low-carbon diet".[97][98][99]
 
You don’t need to pre-rinse before loading the dishwasher and experts recommend scraping food remnants off instead. But if you do rinse, make sure to use cold water, Amann said.
Liiieeessss.

Thanks to the 13-gallon Obama-era dishwasher rule, my dishwasher gets nasty in a matter of weeks if I don't pre-rinse dishes. And some stuff simply won't come off without a soak. Peanut butter, for example.

Also, my clothes washer chooses the length of the wash depending on the cycle I choose. Cold water takes twice as long as the normal setting. What energy is getting saved, exactly?
 
I want to beat this author with a sock full of dimes.

I didn't break my fucking back for years to become a dirty hippy and live without cold water. I'm not some 3rd world shit-hole dweller.

I bought that hot water heater, I'm going to use hot water.

And if this hippy and his friends don't like it, they can eat a bag of dicks.

Here's the thing: cold water doesn't get the soap all the way off your dishes as easily. Cold water doesn't clean the clothes as well. Even fucking medieval peasants knew this.

So the author can eat dicks.
Literally this. lol at taking cold showers like a third world favela nig for nothing but broscience and woo-woo 'trust me bro' feels.
 
Military showers are more reasonable than cold showers, since they use less water than lathering while the water's still running. I wouldn't force anyone to do it like these dipshits, though.
Display of these in your shower, then just do whatever you were going to do anyway. Anyone wandering into your bathroom to pee will go back and tell the world that you're a Good Citizen.
81nhWBpKZxL[1].jpg
 
And this is why bedbugs, lice and other critters are on the rise. Their eggs and such on clothing and bedding can only be destroyed via washing on hot settings, cold water does nothing to them (even with detergents and other things either). Their populations were pretty low back in the days of hotter wash settings, but ever since the 'wash at lower for the environment', they have had a population explosion, to levels normally only seen in 3rd world countries.
I imagine the mass imports of filthy and diseased migrants from the Third World plays a bigger role.

Import the Third World, you get a Third World country.

No fuck off
Also note the choice of subject pronoun. It's "you", not "we", so you're being lectured by your betters at the Bezos Post.

Cant imagine Jeff or Billy G. will be moving into a storage container and taking cold showers any time soon.
 
Last edited:
That, and on a deeper level to make you feel guilty for existing at all.
Unironically. Remember seeing on Netflix back at 2021 had this weird Hippie propaganda that had this soy-filled bitch boy proclaiming on "how they failed the Earth" and how we can do better. And proceeds to show Greta Thundberg as triumphant music swells.

This shit is globohomo as fuck.
 
You’ll note these articles never bring up things like “comfort” “standard of living” and “actually enjoying life”. They want to browbeat you into accepting a lower standard of living and take your submission for granted.
 
What next? "Why you should embrace using dirty water all the time".
Yes, that too. They keep pushing for greywater filtration to be a thing that homes are forced to use, the problem is it's simply far too expensive. This water would be what you'd shower and bathe with. It wouldn't be completely 'dirty' but it isn't usable as potable water.
 
  • Horrifying
Reactions: Smar Mijou
Back