ChatterBank12 mins ago
Energy-Saving. Where?
14 Answers
In the rare coolness of a morning shopping expedition, I wore a jacket. Inside, I had to remove it, such was the heat; the staff in summer clothes. The energy this one supermarket must have been wasting! Then, to counteract the surrounding warmth, even more energy was being used for the deep-freeze cabinets.
[1] Where is the so-necessary energy-saving?
[2] Can shop staff not don a pullover?
[1] Where is the so-necessary energy-saving?
[2] Can shop staff not don a pullover?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.WhenI worked in Tesco it was always cold. We weren't allowed coats so had to wear lots of layers under the uniform, my sister once commented that she had been in her Tesco and you could see the cashiers physically shaking with the cold. Morrison's is always perishingly cold. I'm surprised more closed fridges and freezers haven't been introduced.
Most supermarkets are lit with very low wattage LED lights.
Supermarkets strive to keep the same temperature all year, the same in winter as summer. Customers do not shop if they are too cold, or too warm.
The places are usually full of refrigerated cabinets and chillers, which give off heat, and the number of bodies (staff and customers) also adds to the heat.
Supermarkets strive to keep the same temperature all year, the same in winter as summer. Customers do not shop if they are too cold, or too warm.
The places are usually full of refrigerated cabinets and chillers, which give off heat, and the number of bodies (staff and customers) also adds to the heat.
//It was uncomfortably cool in the Tesco Extra the other day, even though I had my coat on.//
Large Tesco stores (and other large supermarkets) are uncomfortably cold all year round. This is because they have taken to using “open” freezers and are paying to cool the store down to unsuitably low temperatures.
//Ah, such questions...should be addressed to the manager of the offending store.//
No point. Individual store managers have no control over such company-wide policies.
Never mind. Wait until the weather turns cold in a few weeks (which it will, despite “climate change”). You will then witness High Street stores with their doors wide open and a 20Kw “Curtain” heater warming up the street outside.
//…except for those in Waitrose where they insist it's a gilet.//
Pronounced “Jill-ay”. :-) :-)
Large Tesco stores (and other large supermarkets) are uncomfortably cold all year round. This is because they have taken to using “open” freezers and are paying to cool the store down to unsuitably low temperatures.
//Ah, such questions...should be addressed to the manager of the offending store.//
No point. Individual store managers have no control over such company-wide policies.
Never mind. Wait until the weather turns cold in a few weeks (which it will, despite “climate change”). You will then witness High Street stores with their doors wide open and a 20Kw “Curtain” heater warming up the street outside.
//…except for those in Waitrose where they insist it's a gilet.//
Pronounced “Jill-ay”. :-) :-)
// UK guidelines recommend that supermarkets maintain a temperature of 19-21c (66-70f) in winter, and 21-23c (70-73f) in summer, the major chains are often far colder, because they refuse to put doors on all their freezers and chillers - claiming shoppers are put off by viewing food behind glass. //
// one study claimed that if all the UK’s supermarkets put doors on their fridges, the electricity saved would be roughly double the output of the gigantic Drax power station in North Yorkshire. //
// one study claimed that if all the UK’s supermarkets put doors on their fridges, the electricity saved would be roughly double the output of the gigantic Drax power station in North Yorkshire. //