Stay Married -- Divorce Is Bad For Environment
US: December 4, 2007
WASHINGTON - Irked spouses looking for a reason to stay married were offered
a novel rationale by US researchers on Monday: divorce is bad for the
environment.
The global trend toward higher divorce rates has created more households
with fewer people, scientists at Michigan State University reported in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
More households mean more energy expended to build, fuel, and provide water
for them, the researchers wrote.
"Globally, the number of households is increasing much faster than the
number of people," said co-author Jianguo "Jack" Liu in a telephone
interview.
"Even in regions with declining population, we see substantial increase in
the number of households. Divorce is the main reason for reducing the number
of people in a household," he said.
The average divorced person's household is about 40 to 50 percent smaller
than the average married person's household, Liu said. But whether there are
three or six people in a house, the amount of fuel needed to heat them is
about the same.
Divorce tosses out any economies of scale, the researchers found.
In the United States, divorced households used 73 billion kilowatt-hours of
electricity and 627 billion gallons (2.850 trillion litres) of water in 2005
that could have been saved if households had stayed the same size as when
they were married. Thirty-eight million extra rooms were needed, with
associated costs for heating and lighting.
In the United States and 11 other countries such as Brazil, Costa Rica,
Ecuador, Greece, Mexico and South Africa between 1998 and 2002, if divorced
households had combined to have the same average household size as married
households, there could have been 7.4 million fewer households.
The number of divorced households in those countries ranged from 40,000 in
Costa Rica to almost 16 million in the United States around 2000. The number
of rooms per person in divorced households was 33 percent to 95 percent
greater than in married households.
Liu acknowledged that it wasn't necessarily that marriage that was good for
the environment. Rather, it was the size of the household that counted. And
this could mean simply living together outside of wedlock.
"If you really want to get divorced, you know that two people cannot stay
together, you don't want to stay together forever, then maybe you remarry
with somebody else, or live together with somebody else you like," Liu said.
(Editing by Stuart Grudgings)
Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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