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Welcome to ecoTransitions!

We are a wholesaler and distributor for the award winning Caroma Dual Flush toilets in Georgia.

Caroma, an Australian company invented the two button dual flush system in the 1980′s.

Caroma toilets offer a patented dual flush technology consisting of a 0.8 Gal flush for liquid waste and a 1.6 Gal flush for solids. Caroma toilets can save up to 72% (approx. 18,000 gallons) of annual water usage compared to the traditional 3.5-gallon flush and up to 40% (approx. 4600 gallons) compared to today’s standard 1.6-gallon single flush toilets. On an average of 4/1 uses a day, Dual Flush toilets use an average of just under a gallon of water per flush. Proven through performance and acceptance by use in major hotels around the world, our award winning toilets are both user friendly and capable of saving up to 80% of your toilets previous annual water usage. Not only that, with a 3.5″ trapway, blockages become a thing of the past.

Most of our models are listed on EPA’s WaterSense labeled list of High Efficiency toilets, qualifying for the $100 rebate currently offered all over the US.

We will post relevant water conserving info as well as toilet rebate info, as we are passionate about our most important resource – WATER!

If you are interested in learning more about us or Caroma toilets, please contact us at sales@ecotransitions.com or call us at 678. 313.9260. Our warehouse is conveniently located near Six Flags, off I-20. We also deliver for a small additional charge.

Caroma’s “One Flush Makes a Difference” 50% Off Promotion

http://www.caromausa.com/2011/02/09/2011_one_flush_makes_a_difference_50_off_promotion.php

2011 “One Flush Makes a Difference” Promotion

Caroma’s 50% off promotion is back! Last year’s promotion was a huge success and this year we’re once again inviting customers to receive a coupon for 50% off the list price of any qualifying Caroma toilet or sink at participating reseller locations*. The 2011 “One Flush Makes a Difference” promotion honors Earth Month and helps bring awareness to all that Caroma does to promote water-efficiency. You have until June 30, 2011 to participate in the promotion and receive 50 % off the list price of any qualifying Caroma toilet or sink.

Can One Flush Make a Difference?

Absolutely! In the United States federal law requires that new toilets must not exceed 1.6 gallons of water per flush (gpf). The high efficiency toilet (HET) category has set a standard in North America with 1.28 gallons per flush (gpf). Caroma’s HET’s go even further: The average flush of the toilets in Caroma’s standard collection is 1.06 gpf, while the Smart Series features an industry breaking 0.96 gpf!

Just think. If just one person uses a high efficiency toilet for one year then they will save around 330 gallons of water (based on the average three times a day flush). Further, if your toilet is from the 1980s, when new toilets were regulated to use 3.5 gallons of water per flush, you would save 2,410 gallons per year by switching to a HET toilet!

The numbers simply add up. If five people replaced their old 3.5 gpf toilet, over 12,000 gallons of water or the equivalent of 300 20-minute showers would be saved. One flush does make a difference, but if 2,000 people with new toilets switched to a HET toilet, in one year you would be able to fill an Olympic sized swimming pool with the water saved: 660,430 gallons! If 822 people using the old 3.5 gpf toilets changed to a Caroma HET toilet, we could fill an Olympic pool with the water saved!

Start Saving. Now you can save money and water at the same time with Caroma’s “One Flush Makes a Difference” 50% off promotion.

*Available through participating resellers only.
Excludes Invisi™ Series, Somerton Smart 270, Sydney Smart 305 One-Piece, Cube Ultra, H2 Zero Waterless and Flow Showerheads. Shipping not included. 50% discount is based off of the list price. Promotion runs from February 14, 2011 through June 30, 2011. Offer available to all North American residents (Canada exempt). Coupon must be present at time of purchase.
 

Click here to see Participating Dealers - if you are in Georgia, contact ecoTransitions

Gainesville, GA toilet rebate criteria change

Toilet rebate criteria change | AccessNorthGa.

 

Toilet rebate criteria change

BY MARC EGGERS STAFF
GAINESVILLE – The criteria for the City of Gainesville Plumbing Retrofit Program has changed. 

Under the new guidelines, only high efficiency toilets that are 1.28 gallons per flush or less will be eligible for the credit offered by the Gainesville Public Utilities Department.

Under the retrofit program, any single-family residential customer, whose home was built prior to 1993, can replace older model toilets with new water efficient models and receive a $75.00 credit per toilet replaced. The credit is applied to the applicants’ City of Gainesville water bill.

The City of Gainesville was the first to offer a plumbing retrofit program in North Georgia and in the past has offered the credit for 1.6 gpf toilets.

These eligibility changes are due to measures passed by the legislature in the water stewardship act. These changes will take effect statewide in July 2012. However, to continue as a leader in water conservation, the City of Gainesville has opted to implement the changes this year.

A typical family of four can save around 35 gallons a day or 12,775 gallons a year by replacing one 3.5 gpf toilet with a 1.28 gpf toilet.

Rebate applications must be accompanied with an original receipt and can be found online at www.gainesville.org/public_utilities or the Public Utilities Building located at 757 Queen City Parkway, SW Gainesville, GA 30501. Please see application for complete details.

For more information contact Jennifer Flowers at (770) 532-7462, ext. 3287.

 

DeKalb County, GA approves Water Rate Hike

http://www.wsbtv.com/news/26132130/detail.html

The DeKalb County Board of Commissioners approved an 11 percent water and sewer rate increase to pay for nearly $1.4 billion in water and sewer system upgrades in the County.

If your home was built prior to 1993 and you haven’t upgraded your toilets yet, you are wasting a significant amount of water and money. By upgrading an old, inefficient toilet to a WaterSense labeled High Efficiency Dual Flush toilet you can reduce your water usage between 40% and 70%. On top of the water savings achieved by reduced water usage, you will also receive a $100 rebate from Dekalb County Watershed (if you meet the requirements) – details can be found here. If you opt for a Caroma Dual Flush toilet, you can also retire your plunger, as these toilets virtually do not clog (want proof? view this flushing video from ecoTransitions).

County to dump more money in toilet rebate program

County to dump more money in toilet rebate program.

The county’s toilet rebate program is working so well DeKalb County leaders want to dump more money into it. The Board of Commissioners voted on Nov. 14 to add another $250,000 to its toilet retrofit rebate program.

The program, which was initiated in 2008, provides rebates of up to $50 for purchases of eligible toilets that use 1.6 gallons of water per flush (gpf). For the purchase of any approved 1.28 gpf toilet, a rebate of up to $100 is given.

To qualify for the rebate, the old toilet must be a large capacity toilet installed prior to 1993. There is a limit of three rebates per household and the owner must agree to dispose of the used toilet.

The program was started to help siphon water from the county’s waste water treatment system. And it is successful.

The program promotes water conservation, is good for the environment and reduces consumers’ monthly water bills, said Burke Brennan, the county’s chief communications officer.

Since its inception, nearly 14,000 toilets have been replaced, to the tune of $1.12 million in rebates. Based on an average use of 10 flushes per day, that has kept about 498,000 gallons of water out of the waste water treatment system each day or 14.9 million gallons per month.

The county started the program in 2008 with $500,000 in response to a water conservation plan adopted by the state’s General Assembly requiring local governments to speed up the conversion of older, inefficient plumbing fixtures to current low-flow fixtures. Since the initial investment, the board of commissioners has pumped an additional $740,000 more into the rebate program.

 

Water panel passes new conservation measures  | ajc.com

Water panel passes new conservation measures  | ajc.com.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The group charged with developing policy for the 61 retail water systems in metro Atlanta has issued new conservation measures it says will reduce projected consumption by 30 million gallons a day within 30 years.

The eight measures go beyond the state’s new water stewardship law and add to the dozen of measures the group has adopted since it was formed in 2001.That would represent about a 5 percent decline from current consumption levels.

The Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District, which includes 15 counties and more than 90 cities within metro Atlanta, says the new measures will also increase downstream flows to south Georgia, Alabama and Florida.

“These are all measures that local water providers are required to implement over time,” said Pat Stevens, director of environmental planning for the Atlanta Regional Commission. “They’re long-range conservation measures. They’re not drought measures.”

Five of the new measures apply only to water suppliers that withdraw water from Lake Lanier or the Chattahoochee River, systems most affected by a federal judge’s ruling restricting access to those resources. These include systems in Cobb, DeKalb, Forsyth, Gwinnett and Hall counties and most of Fulton County.

Last year, Judge Paul Magnuson ruled that metro Atlanta has no rights to Lake Lanier water, and he gave Georgia until July 2012 to settle a dispute with Alabama and Florida over stream flows south of the lake.

One of the more sweeping steps adopted by the water authority will be installation of meters with point-of-use leak detection. The meters, attached at the connection, will allow residents to monitor their own water use, almost to the drop. It will also give utilities and customers early notice of leaks.

Kathy Nguyen, Cobb County‘s water efficiency manager and Authority representative, said Cobb will probably initiate a pilot program before expanding it to its 175,000 customers.

She said the devices enable customers “to set their own goals for what their use should be,” Nguyen said. They also alert homeowners to anomalies that could tip them off to leaks days or weeks earlier, she said.

Other new conservation measures include metering of private fire lines to identify leaks and unlawful use; enhancing wastewater detection to ensure irrigation systems are operating properly; multi-family high-efficiency toilet rebates; and outreach efforts to homowners about methods to improve their plumbing systems.

Altogether, the new measures, coupled with the 12 already adopted are expected to reduce anticipated water consumption in the region by 130 million gallons a day by 2035, Stevens said.

The programs will cost money, and water rates are expected to rise as they are implemented.

Typically, large counties like Cobb and Gwinnett, and large cities like Atlanta, operate their water systems with customer fees, not taxes.

The payoff may come before many of the programs go into effect.

“We’re trying to show our neighbors to the south, namely Florida and Alabama, as well as the judge that we’re doing a pretty good job with water conservation,” said Jim Scarbrough, Gwinnett County‘s delegate on the Authority. “We’re not wasting it.”

It’s official: Atlanta is the first City in the Southeast offering a toilet rebate program for apartment buildings and condominiums

Mayor Kasim Reed officially announced the first Multi-Family toilet rebate program in the Southeastern United States during the City of Atlanta’s Sustainability Week, October 25-29, 2010. In his  “Power to Change” speech, he outlined how Atlanta plans to become one of the top-ten sustainable cities in the nation.

Below you will find the details on the Multi-family toilet rebate program – you can also visit  the following link for the rebate application. http://www.atlantawatershed.org/owe/multi-family-toilet-rebate.htm

Multi-family Toilet Rebate Program

The City of Atlanta Department of Watershed Management extends its high-efficiency toilet rebate to multifamily customers

Apartment and condominium communities that are City of Atlanta water customers may qualify if the following criteria are met:

  • The property was built prior to 1993
  • Existing toilets use more than 1.6 gallons per flush
  • Property owner/manager is up-to-date on water bill payments
  • Property owner/manager has water and sewer account with DWM
  • Property owner/manager agrees to a pre-installation water audit inspection by DWM
  • Property owner/manager purchases all fixtures and arranges for/pays for installation
  • Property owner/manager provides proof of purchase (original receipts) and proof of installation (plumber/contractor statement or invoice)
  • Property owner/manager contracts with a licensed waste hauler who will transport used porcelain toilets to one of two porcelain recyclers in the Atlanta area (documentation from recycler required)
  • Property owner/manager agrees to a post-installation verification site visit by DWM
  • Property owner/manager completes a multifamily toilet rebate application (which includes all documentation listed above)

If the above criteria are met, the property owner/manager will receive a $100 rebate for each toilet replaced with a 1.28 gallon-per-flush or less EPA WaterSense toilet. Look for the water sense label label.

Rebates will be applied to the water account(s) for the property in question.

Rebates will be applied to qualifying applicants on a first-come, first-served basis as long as funding is available.

For more information about the Multifamily Toilet Rebate Program, contact Jennifer Carlile, jcarlile@atlantaga.gov, (404) 546-1265.

This Low-Flow, Dual Flush Toilet Uses Water From Washing Your Hands For …

 

via This Low-Flow, Dual Flush Toilet Uses Water From Washing Your Hands For ….

Switching to low-flow fixtures and utilizing “greywater” are two of the biggest ways to save water at home…but let’s face it, both are SO inconvenient! But the Profile Smart dual flush toilet from Caroma is here to change that.

Here are the specs:

  • High efficiency dual flush toilet – 1.28/0.8 gallons (4.8/3 liters) per flush
  • Integrated sink for enhanced water savings
  • After flushing, fresh cold water is directed through the faucet for hand washing and drains into the tank to be used for the next flush
  • Unique water and space saving design
  • Chrome buttons built-in to tapware design
  • Easy installation
  • Large trapway virtually eliminates blockages

Even though this toilet is super low-flow, it’s trapway is large enough to allow limes and potatoes to pass through. And let’s face it, if you’re dropping potato-sized nastiness in this bad boy, you probably need to hydrate better or work more fiber into your diet.

Another factor that makes this toilet so great is that it reuses the nearly clean water that you used to wash your hands in the next flush of the toilet. That’s an incredibly simple, easy, and efficient greywater system! What’s even better is that it doesn’t involve the installation of an expensive and complicated greywater system, but is much more sophisticated than simply catching drain water in a bucket and filling your toilet tank with it.

Would you outfit your bathrooms with this lean, mean, porcelain machine?

If you are interested, contact ecoTransitions at sales@ecotransitions.com.

Metro Atlanta Toilet rebate programs

Source: this information is provided on the Metropolitan North Georgia’s Water Districts website.

The following water providers participate in the Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District Regional Toilet Rebate Program.  If you receive your water bill from a provider listed below, you may qualify for an incentive to replace your older, inefficient toilets!

Water Providers Participating in the Metro Water District’s Toilet Rebate Program

  • City of Atlanta Department of Watershed Management
  • Cherokee County Water and Sewerage Authority
  • Clayton County Water Authority
  • City of College Park Water and Sewer
  • Coweta County Water and Sewerage Authority
  • City of Cumming Department of Utilities
  • City of Dallas
  • City of East Point Water Resources
  • City of Fairburn
  • Fayette County Water System
  • City of Fayetteville Water Department
  • Forsyth County Department of Water and Sewer
  • Fulton County Department of Public Works
  • Gwinnett County Water Resources
  • City of Hapeville Water and Sewer
  • Henry County Water and Sewerage Authority
  • City of McDonough
  • City of Powder Springs
  • City of Roswell
  • City of Suwanee Water Department
  • City of Woodstock Water and Sewer

NOTE: Rebates are limited and will be issued on a first-come, first-serve basis. Funding is still available if your water provider’s name is listed above.  If your water provider’s name is not listed, please visit the page of water providers operating individual toilet rebate programs.

Customer Eligibility

Customers must meet the following qualifications to receive a toilet rebate:

  1. Have an individual residential account with a participating water provider in the Metro Water District and be up to date on your billing payments.
  2. Own or rent a single-family residential home built in 1993 or earlier (this will be verified).
  3. Purchase an approved toilet after September 28, 2007 to replace an older toilet using greater than 1.6 gallons per flush (gpf).
  4. Agree to an installation verification visit to ensure your efficient toilets have been installed.
  5. Agree to complete a program participation survey.

Frequently Asked Questions (pdf)

Rebate Options

There is a limit of two (2) toilet rebates per household. There are two rebate options:

Option 1: Purchase a toilet that uses 1.6 gpf or less for a $50.00 rebate. A list of recommended toilets receiving a score of at least 350 grams per flush on the Maximum Performance Test is provided.

$50.00 Rebate Recommended Toilet List (pdf)

Option 2: Purchase a toilet on the $100.00 rebate approved toilet list. These toilets use 1.28 gpf or less and have received the WaterSense certification.

$100.00 Rebate Approved Toilet List (pdf)

Application Instructions

Download the application or call (404) 463-8645 to request a copy be mailed to you.
Mail your completed signed application, original receipt for the new toilet purchased, and a copy of your most recent water bill to:

Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District
Toilet Rebate Program
40 Courtland Street, NE
Atlanta, GA 30303

You should receive a letter in the mail within 30 days confirming your application was received and that your rebate is being processed.
You should receive your rebate within 2 billing cycles. If after 2 billing cycles you still have not received your rebate, contact your local water provider.

Contact Us

For questions about the program contact us by phone at (404) 463-8645 or by email at toiletrebate@northgeorgiawater.org.

Individual Provider Toilet Rebate Programs

Customers in the Metropolitan North Georgia area may be eligible for a rebate by replacing their older, less-efficient toilets with an approved low-flow toilet!

The water systems listed below are offering a toilet rebate program to their customers:

City of Austell
Phone: 770.944.4325

Website Application
City of Gainesville Public Utilities
Phone: 770.532.7462

Website Application
Town of Braselton
Phone: 706.654.3915

Website
City of Lawrenceville Water Department
Phone: 770.277.7597

Website Application
City of Cartersville Water Department
Phone: 770.387.5653

Website Application
Marietta Power and Water
Phone: 770.794.5106

Website Application
Cobb County Water System
Phone: 770.419.6374

Website Application
City of Norcross
Phone: 678.421.2027

Website Application
DeKalb County Department of Watershed Management
Phone: 770.414.2360

Website Application
Paulding County Water System
Phone: 770.443.7512

Website Application
Douglasville – Douglas County Water and Sewer Authority
Phone: 770.949.7617

Website Application
City of Smyrna Water System
Phone: 678.631.5338

Website Application

Note: Rebates are limited and will be issued on a first-come, first-serve basis.  Contact your water provider for program availability and customer eligibility.  If your water provider is not listed, please visit our Toilet Rebate Program main page for a list of all toilet rebate programs.

If you are a water provider and not listed above, but would like more information on offering a program in your service area, please contact the Metro Water District’s Toilet Rebate Program at 404-463-8645.

EPA WaterSense® Award Presented to Caroma®

Source: http://www.caromausa.com/site_assets/www.caromausa.com/images/dynamic/pdf/car-10-06-10-watersense-award.pdf

Caroma, the worldwide leader in high efficiency dual flush toilets forcommercial and residential use, was recently recognized by the U.S. Environmental ProtectionAgency’s (EPA’s) WaterSense program for helping to promote water efficiency. Caroma earned an Excellence Award for its impressive number of WaterSense labeled products in themarketplace—all 47 of its floor-mount, dual-flush toilet models.  Please view the complete Press release here.

60 years of Caroma

Source: http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/collection/blog/index.php/2010/09/60-years-of-caroma/

60 years of Caroma

This year Caroma is celebrating 60 years of manufacturing in Australia. While we may associate the name with toilets and bathroom fittings, the company has been a leader in plastics production since the 1950s. It all began with a plastic syringe…

In 1949 penicillin injections were being used to treat most bacterial infections, but penicillin tended to clog up glass syringes and make them hard to clean. To solve the problem, Austrian immigrant, Charles Rothauser, created the world’s first plastic, disposable hypodermic syringe at his Adelaide factory.

Powerhouse Museum collection

He made the first syringes in polyethylene. However, because polyethylene softens with heat, the syringes had to be chemically sterilised prior to packaging, which made them expensive. In 1951 Rothauser produced the first injection- moulded syringes made of polypropylene, a plastic that can be heat-sterilised. Millions were made for Australian and export markets.

In 1956 Rothauser, renamed his plastics company “Caroma” and began manufacturing bathroom products, including the world’s first one-piece plastic toilet cistern. In the 1970s Caroma made plastic bathroom fittings fashionable with the Bathmates range, available in five colours – red, white, blue, yellow and brown.

Powerhouse Museum collection

Caroma is perhaps best known for developing the dual flush toilet. In 1980, with $130 000 government assistance, Bruce Thompson of Caroma developed a cistern with two buttons and flush volumes (11.0 litres and 5.5 litres). This wasn’t easy because the toilet bowl had to be redesigned to make sure less water could still remove the waste.

Thompson’s Duoset cistern saved 32 000 litres of water a year per household when it was trialled in a small South Australian town. Caroma’s success led to legislation in every state to make dual volume toilets compulsory in new buildings.

Powerhouse Museum collection

In 1994 the company completely redesigned the toilet in stylish porcelain in a modern ‘organic shape’. Its 6 and 3 litre dual flush cistern and matching bowl halved the amount of water normally flushed away.

The Smartflush range designed in 2004, further reduced the flushing volumes to 4.5L and 3.0L and were the first toilets to achieve the Water Services Association Australia (WSAA) AAAA water rating for water efficiency. Five years of research, development and testing of the cistern and pan design were required to achieve effective flushing with minimal water use.

Powerhouse Museum collection

Caroma’s combination of style and environmental awareness has attracted attention in the tough European sanitaryware market and their products are now shipped to more than 30 countries worldwide.

After 60 years, Caroma is still manufacturing some of its products in Australia, with plants in Norwood, South Australia, and Wetherill Park, New South Wales. One Caroma factory makes vitreous china toilet pans and cisterns, the main raw material being clay. The moulds are complex, and the process takes several days, as the wet clay dries slowly and is then glazed and fired in a large kiln. Another factory makes plastic cistern parts, plastic toilet seats, and some plastic cisterns. The processes used for making the plastic parts are injection moulding and compression moulding. For a detailed case study on how Caroma toilets are made and the importance of product quality see the Australia innovates website.

Here’s a sneak peek inside the Sydney factory.

Caroma’s Sydney factory. Courtesy Caroma Industries.

Close up of production line. Courtesy Caroma Industries.

Toilets and pans emerging from the kiln. Courtesy Caroma Industries.

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