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Take an ‘air shower,’ save water

By | January 24, 2013, 10:24 AM PST

Living more sustainably usually means making personal sacrifices. If you drive an electric car you don’t have the same range as gas-powered cars (because of a lack of changing infrastructure). Maybe you set the heater at a low temperature, even during cold winter days, to save energy. And using less water in the shower means low water pressure or shorter shower time. But a fascinating new shower head design uses 50 percent less water than a traditional shower head without feeling like you’re making a sacrifice for sustainability.

Felton, a New Zealand-based company, collaborated with The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) — Australia’s national science agency — to develop the Oxijet nozzle, or “air shower,” which adds air to the water flow to make the shower feel like one with full water pressure.

“Traditional flow restrictors reduce flow and pressure, whereas Oxijet uses the flow energy to draw air into the water stream, making the water droplets hollow,” said Jie Wu, a fluids specialist at CSIRO, in a statement. “This expands the volume of the shower stream, meaning you can save the same amount of water, while still enjoying your shower.”

As with many innovations, this one came about through challenges faced by Australians. Currently all Australian states have are under water restrictions or permanent water efficiency measures. And the cost of water use is going up for residents.

Australian hotel Novotel Northbeach will be the first to use the shower nozzles on a large scale. After testing the product, the hotel expects to see big savings without sacrificing quality by making the switch.

“With over 200 rooms we go through over 10 million litres of water per year, so any saving we can make is very important,” Walter Immoos, General Manager of Novotel Northbeach. “We’ve found our customers prefer Oxijet over other ‘low flow’ shower heads, because it gives the illusion of full water pressure.”

[Via CSIRO]

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Tyler Falk

About Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk

Contributing Editor

Tyler Falk freelance journalist based in Washington, D.C. Previously, he was with Smart Growth America and Grist. He holds a degree from Goshen College.

Follow him on Twitter.

Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk

Tyler does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what he covers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Might be a new design, but not a new idea.
I bought a nearly identical looking shower head at Ace Hardware in 2001. I remember it being Made in the USA, but the brand eludes me.

With an ex wife who loved long showers it cut our municipal water bill by 20 percent. The big savings came on the sewer side of the bill.

They billed you coming and going on the water and the sewer side was twice as expensive per gallon as the water coming in.
Posted by Hates Idiots
Updated - 24th Jan
0 Votes
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I want one
Is there a way to use this water for the garden? I have been thinking about this and I would love to learn and retrofit my house to take some of this useable water from showers ect. and spread it on the garden. I do realize that there are some problems to sort out. However we live on a hill which allows us to use gravity to transport it to our garden. We also would have to control the easily reusable water from the rest. I'll keep looking but if anyone has some "helpful" thoughts please share.
Posted by Savin dough
30th Jan
+1 Vote
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Seen similar before
My shower head of the last 5 years uses the venturi effect to produce a finer, but faster, and thus harder mist. It claims to use between 1/3 and 1/2 less water than a conventional design. I've always like long showers, and after a day or two getting use to the pin-prick streams, the old style shower heads just aren't as nice to shower under any more.

But I very much wish that my municipality would bill me for the water I actually use and the sewage I actually produce. It would cut my bills by 75%.
Posted by mheartwood
30th Jan
0 Votes
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True.
The sewer part kills you if they bill you based on your water intake if you water a garden with municipal water.
Posted by Hates Idiots
1st Feb
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