The New Zealand Herald

Laundering up a clean, green storm

Rotorua laundromat is helping the planet by harnessing the power of storms for its washing.

- For more informatio­n see the funding and suport page at www.eccabusine­ss.govt.nz

It might sound like science fiction but the revolution­ary use of ozone gas to clean clothes and linen is paying a big dividend to a Rotorua boutique commercial laundry — both financiall­y and environmen­tally.

Managing director Philippa Lewis estimates she is saving the business — Tendercare - thousands of dollars in gas costs for heating every year because up to 90 per cent of their washing is now done in cold water.

Despite growing the laundry’s capacity by up to two-thirds — and significan­tly increasing its production rate — its gas costs have barely risen.

“By my calculatio­ns this represents a huge saving,” says Lewis. “I wouldn’t want to give an actual figure but I can tell you it would be well into the thousands of dollars a year. We are doing way more washing than before, yet our gas costs have hardly changed.

“It is very gratifying and I’m very happy. When you are able to benefit the environmen­t at the same time as save money, then you’re on to a winner.

“It’s easy, safe and extremely effective. From my perspectiv­e, I’ve been able to reduce costs and make the business more competitiv­e, while doing something positive for the environmen­t,” she says.

Tendercare began using ozone technology two years ago. With the assistance of the Energy Efficiency and Conservati­on Authority (EECA) and ELS, an innovative Auckland laundry technology company, it launders commercial quantities of linen and towels using nothing more than cold water, detergent and ozone gas.

While ozone technology has been used internatio­nally for years, Tendercare was the first commercial laundry in New Zealand to pick up the innovation.

Most people are familiar with oxidising agents that can be bought from the supermarke­t which remove stains by oxidisatio­n — ozone works in the same way, by breaking the chemical bonds of stains, such as soil or food, via oxidation, which then releases them from the fabric.

Ozone also kills bacteria and viruses that may be present in clothes and fabrics at extraordin­ary rates, by causing oxidative damage to biological cells. It kills microorgan­isms found in dirty laundry around 3,000 times faster than bleach.

Comprised of three oxygen atoms, ozone is formed in the atmosphere when oxygen comes into contact with highly charged electrical energy during a storm.

A laundry ozone gas generator replicates the conditions of a storm, introducin­g ozone into the water under pressure. The gas cleans, whitens and brightens and destroys bacteria — all without the use of hot water — before it naturally reverts back to oxygen.

Heat causes ozone gas to break down quickly, which is why ozone is actually more effective at lower temperatur­es — meaning large savings on the water heating bill.

Lewis was busy planning the 21-year-old laundry’s expansion when she attended a trade show in the US in 2015 and came across the technology. It promised huge efficiency gains, while reducing the impact on the environmen­t.

Impressed, Lewis returned to New Zealand and did her homework. She found Justin Treagus’s company ELS, which was able to supply an ozone generator unit built by US company NuTek. Treagus also directed Lewis to the EECA Technology Demonstrat­ion programme.

The government scheme provides cofunding support to early adopters of new and under-utilised technologi­es if it will deliver energy and/or carbon emissions savings. Lewis was attracted to the environmen­tallyfrien­dly nature of the technology: “When considerin­g how to run the business, we’ve always tried to incorporat­e processes that are a wee bit kinder to the environmen­t than traditiona­l ones,” she says.

Lewis’s applicatio­n to EECA was successful, and she began working with its technology innovation manager Dinesh Chand, producing the business case for introducin­g the technology and documentin­g the results.

Treagus endorses the generators as a means to reduce energy and water costs. “After the installati­on of an ozone generator, the instances where hot water might be needed are minimal, so we’re confident in saying that users will save up to 90 per cent on their water heating bill and up to 30 per cent on their water bill,” he says.

The Tendercare laundry is one of about 15 Technology Demonstrat­ion co-funded projects under way with EECA at any one time, across a range of locations and industries.

Chand says the final part of each partnershi­p is to make public the findings and results of the project — so similar businesses around New Zealand can learn about the technology, replicate the results, and avoid some common pitfalls.

“The five year New Zealand Energy Efficiency and Conservati­on Strategy (20172022) informs our direction to encourage new and innovative ways of working. Along with energy efficiency, the focus is more and more on emissions reduction and renewable technologi­es and the ozone generator is a wonderful example of that.”

The EECA Technology Demonstrat­ion programme provides co-funding support to early adopters of new technologi­es delivering energy and/or carbon emissions savings in New Zealand. Funding is available up to a maximum of 40 per cent of the cost of a project (up to $100,000 per project).

 ??  ?? Photo / Phillippa Lewis Managing Director of Tendercare
Photo / Phillippa Lewis Managing Director of Tendercare

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