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water400

This was going to be a long sweeping article about how wrong we are when we care about different things: how many megapixels a camera has, how much electricity we use by keeping the lights on, using cell phones on airplanes, and swimming in the water when there’s lightning out. But instead of trying to weave all those things together, I’m going to focus on the biggest one.

Water.

This one is near and dear to me, because I am a bad showerer and I got in trouble for it as a kid. I’d wake up on a cold New England morning, snow outside, and tip toe across the cold wood floors.

When I was cold I would hold my hands in front of my chest, hands clasped under my chin. No one else seems to do this, by the way. My brother once told me that I “don’t look like a ninja” when I did it, which apparently is what he guessed my motivation was.

Once in the bathroom, which always seemed colder than the rest of the house, I’d reach into the even colder shower and turn the knob to hot, shivering and counting down the seconds until I could get under the hot water. When the steam finally poured out from behind the shower curtain, I would jump in and exhale in cozy satisfaction.

And then I would do nothing for about ten minutes. I would stand, half asleep, staring at the wall of the shower, probably looking a lot like a dog when he gets his neck scratched. Fifteen minutes later I would be jolted back to reality by my dad, knocking on the door and telling me to hurry up.

Now, even as an adult, long showers are a guilty pleasure.

But how much does it really matter? Do short showers save money? Do they save the planet’s precious scarce water supply?

As you may have guessed by now, it turns out that long showers really don’t matter at all. A showerhead puts out around 2.5 gallons per minute. An extra ten minutes in the shower per day, then, is twenty five gallons. Multiply it out for the month and you’ve just wasted 750 gallons of water.

Sounds like a lot, right? Well, it’s not. That amount of water costs about $1.13. Not a bad monthly fee for an extra five minutes of luxury every day.

On the other side of the coin, how much water do you waste by eating a hamburger?

That sounds like a stupid question with the obvious answer of, “Nothing”, but that’s not actually true. Meat requires far more water consumption to produce than vegetables do. In fact, according to waterfootprint.org, a meat eater’s water footprint is some 185,000 gallons higher per year than a vegetarian’s.

To put things in perspective, the vegetarian could shower for an extra THREE HOURS every day and still use significantly less water per year than a meat eater. Eat one fewer pound of beef per month, and even by the meat industry’s clearly biased numbers, you’ve earned fifteen minutes extra in the shower every day.

My point isn’t that you should necessarily take long showers and stop eating meat, but rather that dogma isn’t always correct. Sometimes things we feel guilty about are actually more innocent than we imagine, and sometimes things we never even thought about are actually pretty big deals.


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There are 28 Comments.


Funk Demon
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 12:05 pm

Perfect timing, I was discussing the environmental effects of meat eating with my roommate yesterday. Its a serious problem but people who eat meat tend not to care much.

P.S. I eat meat


Chris
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 12:44 pm

Doesn’t water from showering/general household stuff get re-utilized and put back into the system/source? What, if any of it, is truly wasted?


peetuhr
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 12:51 pm

you just retold every morning of my life.

… i eat meat. sorry world but im not about to change that. :[

Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 1:12 pm

Household anything will always be dwarfed when compared do industrial anything. Producing any good uses incredible amounts of water for cooling, lubrication, washing, etc.


Tony Rumjog
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 1:27 pm

If you are on a well and septic system with a solar water heater, the net effect is close to zero.

However, if you get city treated water and are on a sewer system with an electric water heater. And the source of your electricty is oil from the tar sands. Then the overall water amount of the extra shower time could fill a small swimming pool. A large swimming pool if you ate a double quarter pounder with cheese in the shower.


Kevin C
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 5:19 pm

@ Nicky: I imagine that household anything applies to all houses combined, not just one vs. the industry.

Maybe I misunderstood what you said, but it sounds like you said anything the industry does will dwarf what a single house will do.


Mordy
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 11:34 pm

This is amazing. Period.

I love your writing. :]


Gruntie
Nov 23rd, 2009 @ 11:45 pm

Wow! I knew tha beef used a lot of resources but had no idea it used that much water. Do you know what the ‘water footprint’ is for poultry and/or seafood?


Jona
Nov 24th, 2009 @ 3:13 am

ysing alot of water is not a problem if you don’t live in a place where there is a shortage of water.

What is bad with taking long hot showers is that it is very energy demmanding to heat water.


test addict
Nov 24th, 2009 @ 3:53 am

I have read all your posts in your blog from the very start.

This in my opinion is both good and bad. You make it seem that eating meat is bad.

But I do believe the reason you have been skinny your whole life is you don’t eat enough and you don’t eat meat.

I dare you to pack on 20 clean pounds. Go consult with Tim Ferris. I don’t advise you to use the HIT method that he used to go from geek to freak, but you mentioned in another post to make YOU a guinea pig.

So this is it. Pack on some weight.

I live in a third world country where 1 in 5 is a victim of crime (hold up, snatch, pick pocketed etc). I have never been held up even if I pass through the most dangerous parts of the country at 2 am. Part of the reason is because I look like a bad ass with muscles.

Nov 24th, 2009 @ 7:02 am

@test addict: I don’t really care about packing on weight, and like being thin. I have eaten meat for 90% of my life and have always been very thin. When I ate raw food only I lost a lot of weight, but otherwise my weight has stayed about the same.

I did notice that once I cut out unhealthy food my body fat % went WAY down (<10%).

Thanks for reading!

Tynan


arebelspy
Nov 24th, 2009 @ 9:55 am

Nice. Busting urban legends are fun.

I’d like to hear (even if in brief) more about the things listed in the first paragraph, or any others.


Mordy
Nov 24th, 2009 @ 3:20 pm

I agree with arebelspy; the topics mentioned in the first paragraph piqued my interest.

Maybe you’re just saving them for future blog posts? :3

Either way, getting your perspective on them (whenever and however possible for you) would be fabulous.

Nov 25th, 2009 @ 3:07 pm

I take like 2 minute, Ice cold showers and don’t eat meat or chicken. I didn’t realize it, but apparently, I’m helping to save the environment :)


Brian
Nov 25th, 2009 @ 7:44 pm

Hah, my morning shower ritual was always exactly the same. I have a reputation in my family for taking insanely long showers because I just luxuriated in the hot water, especially after biking around my neighborhood in Acton on the ice-cold winter mornings delivering newspapers – it was such a treat.

The interesting thing to me about consumption is that if you’re going to prioritize conserving the Earth’s resources as the principal goal, we should eradicate humanity after spending a little while trying to make sure the other species are in halfway-decent balance for when we’re gone.

As an individual, I acknowledge that my life is just consuming resources, since, hey, that’s entropy. And all the activities I love doing take calories, which is more energy, which is more consumption.

Rock climbing is one of my joys in life and I acknowledge it’s just expenditure. I’m eating those calories I burn on the rock, and after a decade of vegetarianism I’m an avid meat eater – my entire diet is essentially meat, dairy, and colorful vegetables. That helps me keep the muscular bulk on that I need for climbing.

Global accounting is essentially impossible – or, rather, global optimization is impossible. At some point you make decisions about what you’re going to do with your life, and acknowledge what the consequences are. That’s just karma, really.

I think the thing is just to be honest with myself about whether my consumption is really bringing me happiness, and whether I hold what I consume – from animals to other people’s time – in the deepest respect.


Matt
Nov 25th, 2009 @ 9:38 pm

What about electric or gas costs of using hot water?


halcyon
Nov 25th, 2009 @ 10:06 pm

I have a question. Do you respect wood, Tynan?


vanmartin
Nov 26th, 2009 @ 2:31 am

I see your limited worldview and raise you an alternative one: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/vegetarian-myth-review/#more-9372


vanmartin
Nov 26th, 2009 @ 3:08 am

I assume my comment was removed?

Nov 26th, 2009 @ 6:53 pm

I want to start by saying that I am often flabbergasted by people when they believe something just because that is what they were taught and have never bothered to test that view.

That is a really interesting website. I had no idea that the meat I eat is THAT bad for the environment. Likely I will not become a vegetarian but you have me considering my options.

Nov 29th, 2009 @ 1:46 am

What about electric or gas costs of using hot water?

Dec 2nd, 2009 @ 11:56 am

This reminds me of when I was a kid in Los Angeles during a drought. They told us we should call our cousins in the rest of America and tell them to turn off the water while they brush their teeth.

Apparently a lot of people leave the tap on while they brush their teeth. My teachers all felt that this was a horrible sin.

To this day I don’t leave the water on while I brush my teeth. You’re welcome mother earth.


Brian
Dec 6th, 2009 @ 2:23 pm

vanmartin – awesome link. I may have to go read that. Thanks for the reference, sounds like a great book.

Dec 10th, 2009 @ 12:22 am

This was a great post! I’m continually surprised at how much of an affect eating meat has on all sorts of seemingly unrelated things.

I’m by no means a vegetarian, but I am trying to be more conscious of my daily decisions and you make some great points about that here. Thanks!

Dec 28th, 2009 @ 11:25 am

Claiming that “meat eaters” waste more water than “vegetarians” is complete non sense and a gross over generalization.

Like Nicky alluded to, bad practices in the raising and slaughtering of animals is good for no one, and the same is true for agriculture (monocrop). Guess what feeds most of our animals? Monocrop agriculture.

The problem lies in how we grow plants, and which plants we choose to grow in the first place.

Corn, soy, wheat- these are the real problems. “Industrial meat” is a far cry from the destruction those plants, and the vegetarians that eat them, cause.


bob
Dec 30th, 2009 @ 5:51 am

Anthony, I see your points on the agricultural system, but as it were, in biology there’s inefficiency in the food chain. If we can in essence “skip” a step (i.e. a vegetarian or vegan diet) then we can conserve more overall energy and resources. No matter how well any animal is raised, overall from an efficiency standpoint, more people could have been fed by utilizing that source directly.

Mar 15th, 2010 @ 3:26 pm

Great site! I think, if you don’t already practice Yoga Tynan, you’d enjoy it. Another highly efficient, fun practice with a ton of benefits… and no stuff to pack around!

May 9th, 2010 @ 2:46 am

[...] Related Posts How to Actually Save Water [...]

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