05 Jun 2023
World Environment Day falls on 5 June and focuses on how organisations across the world can limit waste and facilitate a broader transition to a circular economy. Housing professionals are ideally placed to support their residents to be more sustainable at home, and we’ve decided to mark World Environment Day by looking at two pieces of the broader puzzle – furniture and water.
Furniture reuse schemes
A couple of weeks ago, End Furniture Poverty revealed that 26 per cent of all social housing tenants are living in furniture poverty, compared to nine per cent of all UK residents. For millions, the cost of furniture and essential white goods is simply out of reach, and increasingly so – the cost of furniture, furnishings and carpet has increased by 44 per cent since 2010. End Furniture Poverty have documented the devastating impact this can have, especially for people experiencing homelessness and women fleeing domestic violence.
Circular or reuse schemes can be a vital way for social landlords to offer decent items of furniture to residents at very low costs, or often for free. As End Furniture Poverty have noted, several landlords have set up schemes to collect, refurbish, and redistribute old or damaged furniture to residents. Some of the ways you can do this are:
While taking steps to recycle and reuse furniture shouldn’t be seen as a replacement for providing good furnished tenancies, it can help you move towards that goal. What’s more, recycling furniture and other goods can have a huge environmental impact – in 2022, the reuse sector reused 2.7 million furniture and electrical items, saving 98,935 tonnes of CO2 emissions.
Down the plughole
Beyond furniture, you can take steps to recycle and reduce waste in other areas. On average, every person in the UK uses 145 litres of water every day. In fact, most of the mundane, everyday things we do at home involve using water, like using a dishwasher (14 litres) and flushing the toilet (five litres).
Small changes can go a long way to achieving this, and some of the things you can do are:
Reducing water waste is not just a matter of saving the environment, it’s a matter of saving money too. Water is expensive, with bills continuing to rise, and an astonishing 109 litres per home are lost each day through leakage. Helping residents to be more water efficient could save them money on their energy bills and, if they have a water meter, their water bills too.
Waste not want not
Furniture and water are just two of the areas where we need to move to a more circular and efficient economy of use. There are many more – energy, food, and waste, to name but three. But if nothing else, World Environment Day is a good opportunity to pause and think through how we can be more efficient, both for our organisations, our residents, and of course ourselves too.
Matthew is a CIH policy and practice officer leading our work on asset management, specifically on building safety, repairs and maintenance and the domestic transition to Net Zero in social housing. He holds a PhD from Newcastle University and has previously held several research and policy roles in the academic and third sectors.