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Not Sexy – But Fabulous – And Necessary

Some things are sexy, others aren’t. Toilets usually fall into the latter category. But they can be fabulous, especially when they single flush 0.8 gallons – and do the job – if you get my drift.
Niagara Conservation’s new Stealth toilet is the first and only toilet available with the ability to achieve a powerful, quiet flush using just 0.8 gallons of water. That’s pretty remarkable considering that most current single flush toilets use 1.6 gallons per flush and older style models flush 3.5 gallons. That adds up to impressive savings – 77 percent less water per flush than the older style 3.5 gallon toilet, saving up to 20,000 gallons of water per year and as much as $150 in savings annually per household on water usage, depending on the wastewater rate. Even dual flush toilets don’t do s well.
More impressive stats from Niagara: the U.S. has an estimated 241 million toilets, which use an estimated 1.3 trillion gallons of water. If every household in America switched to Niagara’s Stealth toilet, we could save more than 914 billion gallons of water and $6 billion in utility bills. Even if just 10 percent of American households converted to Niagara’s Stealth toilet, it could save 91 billion gallons of water per year and provide more than $640 million in savings on utility bills.
The Stealth toilet has earned the WaterSense label, the symbol for high-performing, water-efficient products. A labeling program run by EPA, WaterSense makes it easy to find water efficient products, which is important because, even though it may not seem so, water on Earth is in short supply. According to WaterSense, “less than 1 percent is available for human use. The rest is either salt water found in oceans, fresh water frozen in the polar ice caps, or too inaccessible for use. While the population and the demand on freshwater resources are increasing, supply remains constant.”
The new Stealth toilet is currently available online at www.itseasybeinggreen.com for a retail price of $308, and will be coming soon to local retailers, kitchen and bath showrooms, as well as plumbing wholesalers.
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Kevin commented:
BP oil spill was the biggest rtnuaal disaster in America when it comes to oil disasters. But seriously it wasn't even close being the worst rtnuaal disaster in the world or even in US.The top 5 rtnuaal disasters all time: 1. China floods, death toll: 1-2,5 million people. (1931)2. Yellow river flood in China, death toll: 900,000 2 million people (1887)3. 1556 Shaanxi earthquake in China, death toll: 830,000 people (1556)4. 1970 Bhola cyclone in Pakistan, death toll: 500,000 people (1970)5. 1839 India Cyclone, death toll: 300,000 people 9. 2004 Indian ocean tsunami, 230,000 casualties10. 2010 Haiti earthquake, 220,000 casualtiesTop 10 US rtnuaal disasters: 1.Galveston, Texas Hurricane- September 18, 1900: 8000 deaths2. Okeechobee Hurricane, Florida- September 16, 1928: 2500 deaths3. Johnstown, PA Flood- May 31, 1889: 2200 deaths4. Chenier Caminada Hurricane- October 1, 1893: 2000 deaths5. “Sea Islands” Hurricane- August 27-28, 1893: 1000-2000 deaths6. Hurricane Katrina- August 29, 2005: 1800 deaths7. Great New England Hurricane- September 31, 1938: 720 deaths8. San Francisco Earthquake- April 18, 1906: 700 deaths9. Georgia, South Carolina Hurricane- August 27 1881: 700 deaths10. Tri State Tornado in Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana- March 18, 1925: 695 deathsThe BP oil spill doesn't rank anywhere, really. Casualties included 13 people. Even the financial cost, as large as it is, is nothing compared to those I listed above and many more.References :
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