It’s important to heed this warning - the biggest ever in-depth investigation of sewer blockages in the UK, carried out by Water UK in 2017, found that non-flushable wet wipes made up around 90% of ...
Let’s face it, wet wipes are a convenient, nappy changing essential that we all use on a daily basis. The easy alternative to cotton wool and water, they help with hygiene, and in a pinch, there’s ...
Wet wipes - mostly baby wipes, but also those used to remove make up and clean surfaces - made up the vast majority of the material. Fat, oil and grease only made up 0.5%. The other 7% was made up ...
Things to look for while buying When buying wet wipes, one should look at whether the wipes are suitable for the baby's skin type or not. One should look for wet wipes that are soft, have a mild ...
"Rags" are what people in the water treatment business call the broad class of consumer products known as "wipes" — baby wipes, disinfectant wipes and "personal cleansing wipes" that are used like ...
They work so well that you may purposely dry out wet wipes in the future. Baby wipes are designed to be strong, given their humble but important task of meeting your baby's diapering needs.
All wet wipes sold as "flushable" in the UK have so far failed the water industry's disintegration tests, the BBC has found. Water companies say wet wipes don't break down and are causing ...
“Rags” are what people in the water treatment business call the broad class of consumer products known as “wipes” — baby wipes, disinfectant wipes and “personal cleansing wipes” that ...