Switzerland’s environment minister is facing backlash after recommending that people shower together in an effort to cut energy consumption this winter and fend off power cuts.
Simonetta Sommaruga, 62, suggested that people “turn off the computer when you don’t need it, or turn off lights, or shower together” as part of her measures promoting a 15 percent reduction in energy consumption, The Times of London reported.
Her suggestions were in response to questions on the government’s campaign by readers of Swiss newspaper 20 Minuten, according to the report.
Authorities in Switzerland, which imports 75 percent of its gas from Germany, said in August that they are aiming to cut energy consumption by 15 percent from October 2022 to the end of March 2023, compared to the average consumption of the past five years.
That month, officials also began a campaign titled “Energy is limited. Let’s not waste it,” which called on people to help ensure the country avoids an energy shortage ahead of winter by using less water, switching off electrical appliances and lights when they aren’t in use, and lowering their heating temperatures.
If the situation doesn’t improve and further shortages are seen, the Swiss Federal Council could implement “consumption restrictions, bans, and quota systems,” according to local reports.
‘Administer Our Private Lives’
Sommaruga’s comments have been heavily criticized by Géraldine Savary, editor of the women’s magazine Femina.
In an editorial published on Sept. 16, Savary wrote that the Swiss government is seeking to “administer our private lives, down to the most trivial details.”
She jokingly added that Swiss residents should wake up to the sound of “chirping birds,” because they have disconnected their alarm clocks, and eat breakfast in “the darkness of the kitchen” before going to work “arm in arm, having left the car, the scooter and the electric bicycle in the garage.”
The backlash prompted Sommaruga to tell the Swiss daily Tages-Anzeiger that her comments regarding showering together were intended for young people.
She noted that “after a certain age, showering together is no longer suitable for everyone,” but said she believed the idea of showering together to reduce energy consumption had been widely well-received, The Times of London reported.
While Switzerland is one of the world’s richest countries, it’s one of the least self-sufficient in terms of energy production, according to swissinfo.ch, with domestic electricity production covering just 25 percent of the country’s energy needs. It also doesn’t have gas storage facilities of its own, meaning a reduction of gas from Europe would affect the country.
Russian state-owned energy corporation Gazprom recently announced it wouldn’t be resuming gas flows any time soon through its Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany. The oil giant has not yet provided an official reopening timeline.
Meanwhile in Switzerland….
"Switzerland’s environment minister has recommended that people save energy by having showers together."https://t.co/PSGk6e2hob
— Amit Paranjape (@aparanjape) September 20, 2022
Podcast: “In the 80s we had communal baths & lads liked getting in & soaking their legs." Ray Houghton backs Swiss Environment Minister to share baths & showers to bring down energy costs. https://t.co/prGw26m1Ir via @NewstalkFM @SeanMoncrieff @NPAIE #Ploughing #Ploughing2022
— Henry McKean (@HenryMcKean) September 20, 2022
From The Epoch Times:
#
Related:
‘The no-showering challenge’: ‘Why we should all take part’
Jennifer Aniston: ‘Despite owning a swimming pool…confesses to taking only 3 minute showers’
Fewer showers to help global warming? Students willing to ‘shower less often’
‘Some nauseating details on just one of many insane ways that the Obama/Chu braintrust blew your money in an attempt to prevent CO2-induced bad weather’ — ‘It wasn’t just any factory. When it was completed at an estimated cost of $733 million, including proceeds from a $535 million U.S’
Biden orders return to low-flow showers, nixes Trump reprieve from environmentalist showerhead rules
Being Woke Stinks: NYT Says Americans Should Take Fewer Showers for Environment
New York Times “breaking news” reporter Maria Cramer propagandized how a preschool administrative assistant named Robin Harper allegedly has only “shower[ed] once a week” since the pandemic. In Cramer’s estimation, “The new practice felt environmentally virtuous, practical and freeing. And it has stuck.” … “The individual choice to stop showering or bathing daily is a critical one to make at a time when environmentalists are calling on countries to take more action against climate change, Mr. McCarthy, the environmentalist [who bathed ‘once a week,’] said.”
#