Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

It’s just hair today, but saving the world tomorrow

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TAYSIDE salon owner Charlie Taylor, pictured, has been a hairdresse­r for 45 years – but has never known what to do with the mountains of cut hair.

Every year hundreds of black bags are filled to the brim from her salons in Perth and Dundee.

With some regret, the hair, tint tubes and other waste have been sent to landfill.

But now the businesswo­man has discovered a way for her salons to be completely waste free and is asking customers to pay an extra £1 green fee.

“Until now we’ve done the standard recycling – plastics and cardboard and that’s all we’ve been able to do,” Ms Taylor said.

“I’ve had the occasional client asking for their hair to put around their fields and garden. Apparently it helps keep deer away.

“I can not even begin to estimate how much hair we throw away – a crazy amount. But now we’ve joined the Green Salon Collective which means everything can be recycled.”

The initiative was founded by environmen­tal experts, hairdresse­rs and eco campaigner­s with the aim of recycling or repurposin­g all waste.

It charges salons to collect separated waste in electric or carbon-neutral vehicles.

The hair can be used for gardening or composting purposes or for oil or waterway cleaning operations.

Company director Alastair Taylor said: “The hair goes into cotton sausages that can be used in rivers or for soaking up oil.

“At the moment our tint tubes are sent to landfill and take 400 years to break down.

“We want to move the business from a linear model of everything getting binned or put down the sink, to a circular model where it is recycled or repurposed for something else.”

With clients returning with much more hair than normal after lockdown, it’s a good time to launch the initiative.

Ms Taylor’s salons are almost completely booked until the middle of May.

“We are back in the flow and feel like I’ve never been away,” she said.

“We’ve got a busy few weeks ahead of us and the customers have been so pleased.

“Clients come in looking a bit sad and go out with massive smiles on their faces – it’s a joy.

“We want to be a forward-thinking business. I think ultimately all salons will have to move to zero waste.”

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