High Efficiency Toilets Hastings MN

When a dazzling High Efficiency Toilet (HET) comes along that truly delivers on its promise to curtail water use and still ensure that everything – yes everything – goes down the toilet in one flush, it’s worth taking note. Please scroll down to learn more and get access to all the related products and services in Hastings, MN that are listed below.

Five Star Plumbing, Inc.
(651) 459-8180
654 Sutherland Drive
Woodbury, MN

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Doug's Plumbing and Heating
6764 Pine Arbor Boulevard South
Cottage Grove, MN

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Edwards Plumbing
(651) 769-1192
8519 Jeffery Ave S
Cottage Grove, MN

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H P Pipeworks
(651) 365-1340
3670 Dodd Rd Ste 100
Eagan, MN

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Berg Plumbing & Heating Inc
(651) 451-2950
648 2nd Ave
Mendota Heights, MN

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Bonfe'S Plumbing, Heating, And Air Service, Inc.
(612) 332-6633
505 Randolph Ave.
Saint Paul, MN

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edwards plumbing
(651) 769-1192
8519 jeffery ave.
cottage grove , MN
 
Matthew Daniels Inc
(651) 423-3730
15230 Carrousel Way
Rosemount, MN

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Farmington Plumbing & Heating
(651) 463-7824
21034 Chippendale Ave W
Farmington, MN

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A-AA Sewer Drains
(952) 467-8566
847 Haralson Dr
Apple Valley, MN
 
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Conserve Water with a Niagara Ecologic High Efficiency Toilet

Conserve Water with a Niagara Ecologic High Efficiency Toilet

August 31, 2009   Josh Dorfman

Green messages abound these days. Some are worth listening to. Many are merely noise and distraction that don’t amount to much. Admittedly, it’s hard to know what’s legit and what is little more than eco-marketing ploy. And of the stuff that’s environmentally legit, it’s hard to distinguish the high-quality green products from those that suffer from really good intentions but a lack of corresponding business skill and manufacturing acumen.

So when a dazzling High Efficiency Toilet (HET) comes along that truly delivers on its promise to curtail water use and still ensure that everything – yes everything – goes down the toilet in one flush, it’s worth taking note. Before I left Brooklyn earlier this summer and moved to the mountains surrounding Asheville, North Carolina, I installed a Niagara Ecologic Toilet (about $350) in my apartment that utilizes only 1.28 gallons of water per flush. That’s down from 1.6 gallons for standard toilets purchased today (and about 2.8 gallons for toilets purchased over fifteen years ago). Doesn’t sound like much of a difference? Well, if that toilet were flushed, say, 10 times a day, an HET toilet would save 3.2 gallons of water per day, or about 1150 gallons of water over the course of a year. That’s a lot of water for just one toilet to save.

So what’s the rub? Toilets are expensive to buy and every expensive to install. I’m amazed at how much my plumber charged me. In fact, one of the best paying green jobs I can think of would be as a green plumber specializing in the installation of water efficient products. Trust me, you would make bank while working to protect the planet. And this is also why I still think that installing a low-flow showerhead makes much more financial and environmental sense as an initial step when greening your home.

On the flip side, the good news about toilets is that at Toi...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist