I'd have to agree with Warmsecondrinse; there are far more wasteful activities we *ought* to be targeting before chasing clothes washing. As the saying goes, its like plugging a little pinhole leak in a dyke where there is a gaping hole further along!
(This also circles back to the thread on the EU and vacuum cleaners; Again, we still have industry using copious amounts of water, electricity and gas - but we're targeting microscopic percentages of this total use in the home world. We can go further and say, its all well and good to have manufacturing plants powered by solar and wind, but if we can avoid having to MANUFACTURE stuff in the first place, we can save more. Since when were "durable goods" not something that lasted 15, 20, 25 or more years?)
Thanks Rapunzel for your thoughts above. I gave you a checkmark.
I do not believe in chucking stuff because its still good, and is just "old fashioned." Of course, thats initially it was possible to produce long-lived appliances. I know people who buy new DINING sets, "Oh, that tables lasted 10 years. I got my money's worth, so I'm getting a new one." Its why I've got several computers, doing something within their niche. I mean, sure, they don't have the latest and greatest Windoze, but they still work great for what I need - which is reading forums and LEARNING (about anything, really).