Ban all baths to save water, Sweden’s king says

King Carl Gustaf wants to turn his Stockholm palace green

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London: The king of Sweden wants to ban bathtubs, to save water and energy.

King Carl XVI Gustaf, who shed his reputation as a Lothario to become better known as an environmentalist, wants to turn his Stockholm palace green. In a frank interview the 69-year-old suggested that as he had given up baths himself, Swedes should follow suit. Asked for energy-saving tips, he said: “We should ban all baths”. He recently ran a bath when staying somewhere that lacked showers. “It hit me how much water and energy it used,” he said. “I thought ‘I can’t believe I’m having to do this’. I felt quite ashamed.”

The ‘ban’ comment appeared to be in jest, but the monarch added: “There’s truth in it though. It’s the small details that have an enormous effect.”

The Swedish head of state now drives an eco-friendly hybrid car despite a lifelong reputation as a “petrol-head”. “When I drive into town it’s on electricity,” he told Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet.

Like the Prince of Wales, who famously fitted Highgrove House with ‘eco’ toilets, the king is taking steps to make his residence greener by switching to more environmentally friendly heating and to low-energy light bulbs. “We do what we can here at the palace. It’s an ongoing project trying to save energy, but it isn’t easy in an old property,” he said.

King Carl Gustaf plans to attend the UN climate change conference in Paris starting in just over a week. “We have to think that we will do our best,” he said. “And I think there is a general feeling that we’re going to achieve it.” He took part in the first UN environmental conference, in Stockholm in 1972, and says that talking about global climate change is “an opportunity and a duty I have.”

— The Telegraph Group Limited, London 2015

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