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With 'thank you' emails, polite Britons burn thousands of tonnes of carbon a year

by Rosa Furneaux | @rosafurneaux | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Tuesday, 26 November 2019 17:42 GMT

A man uses a computer mouse in his office in Kiev, Ukraine, June 13, 2017. Picture taken June 13, 2017. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

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If each adult sent one less email a day, Britain could reduce its carbon output by 16,433 tonnes - equal to more than 81,000 flights from London to Madrid

By Rosa Furneaux

LONDON, Nov 26 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Britain could significantly cut its carbon footprint if people stopped sending unnecessary 'thank you' emails, researchers said on Tuesday, calling on the public to 'think before you thank'.

Britons send more than 64 million unnecessary emails per day, a study by energy supplier OVO Energy found, with unactionable pleasantries such as 'thank you' and 'thanks' topping the list of most common offenders.

"Is OVO asking everybody to be more rude? Absolutely not," said Mike Berners-Lee, an expert on carbon footprinting at Britain's Lancaster University who carried out the analysis.

"But if you send somebody a 'thanks' email, and they're only three metres away from you, it might be nice to just go over and say, thank you very much," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

If each adult sent one less email a day, Britain could reduce its carbon output by 16,433 tonnes - equal to more than 81,000 flights from London to Madrid, the study found.

OVO Energy has created software to identify when a user has sent a potentially unnecessary email and prompt them to be more thoughtful.

The study found 49% of Britons frequently sent emails to colleagues within talking distance. Despite the country's penchant for politeness, 71% of Britons said they wouldn't mind not receiving a 'thank you' email if it helped the environment.

(Reporting by Rose Furneaux; Editing by Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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