成人快手

Elle is 26 and the co-founder of a biodegradable wet wipe business.

Trained as a scientist, Elle spent most of her time shut away in a lab, until her friend鈥檚 blocked toilet catapulted her career in a whole new direction.

Elle in an office looking at a computer screen with her colleagues.

Elle's journey

Elle鈥檚 lightbulb moment happened over breakfast, when a friend shared that he鈥檇 blocked his toilet because he鈥檇 been flushing non-biodegradable wet wipes. Needless to say, no one had much of an appetite after this!

Elle was already a bit of an 鈥渆肠辞-飞补谤谤颈辞谤鈥 but her friend鈥檚 dilemma, coupled with her background in science, inspired her to find a solution. The aim? To develop a biodegradable, truly flushable wet wipe.

After months of hard work, tonnes of testing and lots of hanging around sewage plants, Elle and her team finally cracked it.

Elle in an office looking at a computer screen with her colleagues.
This is a decorative purple line to separate and organise content on the page.
Elle dropping a wet wipe into a vase of water.

How can biodegradable wet wipes help the planet?

Non-biodegradable wet wipes 诲辞苍鈥檛 break down in water so they have to be filtered out at sewage works and sent to landfill sites. This is expensive and they can take years and years to break down.

Sometimes, wet wipes and other non-biodegradable waste, ends up stuck in the sewers causing massive obstructions known as 鈥榝补迟产别谤驳蝉鈥. Fatbergs are also expensive to remove.

In 2018, a fatberg was found in the London sewers that weighed 130 tonnes. It was the twice the size of the football pitch at Wembley and took nine weeks to get rid of.

Some wet wipes eventually wash up in rivers and on beaches. The tiny plastic fibres in the wipes can be ingested by fish and marine life, sometimes causing them to die, or entering into the food chain.

Biodegradable wet wipes, on the other hand, will break down in water which means no more nasty waste clogging up our sewers and oceans.

Elle dropping a wet wipe into a vase of water.
This is a decorative purple line to separate and organise content on the page.

What to expect if you want to be a business owner

The salary and working hours when you own a business can vary enormously but what's most important is that you work hard and love what you do.

Working for yourself looks different for each person and each business, but in general it means you:

  • run your own business and are responsible for its success
  • can decide how, when and where you do your work
  • charge an agreed, fixed price for your work
  • sell goods or services to make a profit
  • can hire people at your own expense to help you or to do the work for you.

You can be both employed and self-employed at the same time. You can work for your employer during the day, for example, and run your own business in the evenings and at weekends. It鈥檚 important to for advice if you鈥檙e not sure if you鈥檙e self-employed.

You can , through the government鈥檚 business support services, for example, for advice about tax or about how to find funding to start your business.

This information is a guide (source: ).

For careers advice in all parts of the UK visit: , , and .

This is a decorative purple line to separate and organise content on the page.

How origami inspired my sustainable fashion business. video

Find out why Ryan switched aeronautical engineering for running his own wearable technology company.

How origami inspired my sustainable fashion business

Georgie: marine conservationist. video

Find out how Georgie made her hobby into a career and followed her obsession with the ocean all the way to the sea bed.

Georgie: marine conservationist

Dan: ornithologist. video

Find out how Dan uses nature to calm her anxiety, whilst also protecting the birds and wetlands she loves.

Dan: ornithologist