Philippine Daily Inquirer

BRITISH HAIRDRESSE­RS MOVE TO CUT DOWN POLLUTION

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LONDON—Hairdresse­rs across Britain are being urged to do their bit for the environmen­t by recycling snipped-off hair to help clean up oil spills, make compost or generate energy.

At an east London salon, Fry Taylor, one of the founders of the Green Salon Collective, demonstrat­es spare hair being used in depollutin­g filters.

He shows how a cotton net stuffed with hair, swept across the surface of a tank of water contaminat­ed with motor oil, instantly cleans up the pollutant.

“The hair just naturally will absorb the oil and hold on to the oil, that’s the important factor,” Taylor, a former hairdresse­r, told AFP.

A kilo of hair can absorb up to 8 liters of oil, according to experts.

The idea of using hair filters originated in the United States and has already been tested in real disasters, such as when a Japanese tanker sank off the coast of Mauritius a year ago.

Britain was lagging behind in recycling unwanted hair when the collective formed last summer, according to Taylor.

“There are, in other countries around the world, recycling systems for hairdressi­ng salons,” he said.

“In the UK and Ireland, they just don’t have the infrastruc­ture.

“We’re not going to wait another five or 10 years for government­s and councils to have these systems in place, let’s just do it ourselves,” he added.

Green tax

The waste produced by the hairdressi­ng industry in the UK each year could fill 50 football stadiums, the collective said.

Most rubbish, including alu minum foil, colored tubes and 99 percent of cut hair, is sent to a landfill site, it added.

Another big problem is chemical waste such as dyes and bleaches.

“There are currently approximat­ely 30,000 salons and another 100,000 freelancer­s” who are pouring hydrogen peroxide and ammonia into water systems, Taylor said.

The collective is encouragin­g salons to save these products in a small bin, which it then collects and sends to a facility to produce electricit­y.

Hair stylist Adam Reed, who owns a salon in London’s trendy Spitalfiel­ds neighborho­od, is a recent convert to the recycling mission and proudly explains his system to customers.

Saying he was “blown away” by what the Green Salon Collective had taught him, the internatio­nally renowned hairdresse­r added he “didn’t quite realize the enormity of it” beforehand.

“It made me realize that sustainabi­lity in salons is something that had been missing and it’s really easy to bring into the salon,” he said.

“We have our bins, all labeled, so it’s easy to navigate.”

Hair, protective equipment, metals, papers and plastics each have their own bin.

‘Super food’

The salon, which pays a £120fee ($192) to be a member of the collective, also recycles leftover dye product.

Reed charges clients a “green tax” of 1 or 2 pounds, and has so far received a “very positive response.”

Composting is another green use of hair, whose rich nitrogen content makes it an ideal fertilizer supplement.

Collective member Ryan Crawford, owner of a salon in the town of Milton Keynes, northwest of London, has experiment­ed with hair on his vegetables in the garden.

On a sunny July day, he showed AFP two young cabbage shoots: one, surrounded by hair, is intact; the other, planted without hair, is skeletal and gnawed.

500 kilos

“It’s like a protective barrier around the base of the new seedlings,” he said.

“It’s definitely worked keeping things like slugs or snails off,” he added, saying that putting hair directly into the soil also helps retain moisture and acts as “a superfood for the earth,” replenishi­ng nitrogen levels.

Over the last year, around 600 salons in the UK and Ireland have joined the collective, which has amassed around 500 kilos of hair.

It has been used to clean up waterways, an oil spill in Northern Ireland in May and for composting.

The collective has also gathered 3.5 tons of metal, which is being recycled.

It now hopes to export the model on a large scale across Europe.

Sustainabi­lity in salons is something that had been missing and it’s easy to bring into the salon

Adam Reed Salon owner

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? HAIR IT GOES Salon owner and hairdresse­r Adam Reed cuts the hair of a client in Spitalfiel­ds, east London, on July 1, before collecting the hair for recycling. Environmen­talists are encouragin­g hairdresse­rs across the UK to recycle hair, which can be used to clean up oil spills, make compost or generate energy.
—PHOTOS BY AFP HAIR IT GOES Salon owner and hairdresse­r Adam Reed cuts the hair of a client in Spitalfiel­ds, east London, on July 1, before collecting the hair for recycling. Environmen­talists are encouragin­g hairdresse­rs across the UK to recycle hair, which can be used to clean up oil spills, make compost or generate energy.
 ??  ?? CLEANUP TOOL Fry Taylor, cofounder of Green Salon Collective, demonstrat­es the use of a boom made with hair from salons in Britain to clean an oil spill.
CLEANUP TOOL Fry Taylor, cofounder of Green Salon Collective, demonstrat­es the use of a boom made with hair from salons in Britain to clean an oil spill.

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