•
In your house check for leaks from faucets and pipes;
even the smallest drip can waste as much
as 75 liters a day.
In
the bathroom:
• Flush less — remember the toilet
is not an ashtray or wastebasket.
•
While brushing teeth, shaving, etc., turn off the water.
•
When cold water will do, avoid using hot water.
•
Take shorter showers — 5 minutes or less.
•
In the shower, wet yourself down, turn the water off, lather
up, then turn the water on to rinse off soap.
In
the kitchen:
• Operate the dishwasher only when you have a full
load.
•
Scrape, don’t rinse, your dishes before loading in
the dishwasher.
•
When purchasing a dishwasher, consider a water-efficient
model.
•
Thaw frozen food in the refrigerator or microwave, not under
running water.
•
Store drinking water in the refrigerator instead of letting
the tap run while you wait for cool water to flow.
•
When washing dishes by hand, fill one sink or basin with
soapy water and fill the rinsing sink to one-third or one-half
full
— avoid letting the water run continuously in the
rinsing sink.
In
the laundry:
• For washers with variable settings for water volume,
select the minimum amount required per load.
•
If load size cannot be set, operate the washer with full
loads only.
•
Use the shortest wash cycle for lightly soiled loads; normal
and permanent press wash cycles use more water.
•
Check hoses regularly for leaks.
•
Pretreat stains to avoid rewashing.
