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Bio-Dry Team Blog

Follow the Bio-Dry team, keep up with product news and field reports
Tags >> waterless

When planning your New Year, consider that healthy resolutions easily partner with helping the environment. If we all make one change in 2011, it should be to simply think about the impacts our choices have.

Get Inspired: Get outside and find your environment; a place to help protect for the future.

Decide to Act: Simply thinking about your purchases and where they came from is the right start. Our actions and our choices generate a domino effect beyond what we see, so make choices for a positive one.

Share and Maintain: Talk to friends and family, learn from others and keep it up! Simply talking about the environment spreads awareness; you never know who else you’ll inspire!

5 Simple Ideas to Improve Your Year and Your Environment

  • Think about your water and where your drain drains! (and recommend to all your friends to use Bio-Dry waterless concrete cleaner on all oil and grease stains to save water!)
  • Find local food and produce, challenge yourself to a weekly recipe with a locally grown or organic ingredient. Reduce air pollution caused by food and goods transport.
  • Go car-free or consolidate errands with friends.
  • Learn about your recycling options in your city or town. If we counted our garbage like we count calories, would things be different? Label your trash bin “landfill” if you need a reminder!
  • Most importantly, talk to others. Compare ideas and involve kids, there’s no better way to get inspired!
For more on how you can help, go to the Pick 5 International Program at the US EPA website: http://www.epa.gov/pick5

You’ve probably heard the word “sustainable” lately and if you know anything about Bio-Dry, you know it is a sustainable product, but what does that mean?

Sustainability is the capacity to endure. In ecology, the word describes how biological systems remain diverse and productive over time. Long-lived and healthy wetlands and forests are examples of sustainable biological systems.  For humans, sustainability is the potential for long-term maintenance of well being, which has environmental, economic, and social dimensions.

Healthy ecosystems and environments provide vital goods and services to humans and other organisms. There are two major ways of reducing negative human impact and enhancing ecosystem services. The first is environmental management; this approach is based largely on information gained from earth science, environmental science, and conservation biology. The second approach is management of human consumption of resources, which is based largely on information gained from economics.

Ways of living more sustainably can take many forms from reorganising living conditions (e.g., ecovillages, eco-municipalities and sustainable cities), reappraising economic sectors (permaculture, green building, sustainable agriculture), or work practices (sustainable architecture), using science to develop new technologies (green technologies, renewable energy), to adjustments in individual lifestyles that conserve natural resources.

Bio-Dry is sustainable because it provides vital goods and services to humans and other organisms.  Because Bio-Dry is a waterless concrete and asphalt cleaner, it reduces the negative human impact and enhances the ecosystem.  Bio-Dry is engineered to clean, protect and condition the surface. Bio-Dry deactivates harmful hydrocarbons through the processes of adsorption, emulsification and bioremediation (more to come on the processes of adsorption and emulsification).   Bio-Dry is easy to apply and it is environment friendly.  Furthermore, Bio-Dry looks better and lasts longer than pressure washing or alternative cleaning methods.  Bio-Dry attacks petroleum based stains and protects concrete from future oil spills.

Source for sustainability: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability


EPA Recognizes Nation’s First WaterSense Labeled Homes


Water efficiency program aims to help homebuyers save money on utility bills while cutting their water and energy use 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the first WaterSense labeled homes in the country. WaterSense is a partnership program sponsored by EPA that seeks to protect the future of our nation’s water supply by offering people a simple way to use less water.

The program is helping homebuyers cut their water and energy use while at the same time saving money on utility bills. Four WaterSense labeled new homes have been built by KB Home in Roseville, California, and will help families save an average of 10,000 gallons of water and at least $100 on utility costs each year. 

“To meet the environmental and economic needs of homes and communities, it’s important that we’re doing everything we can to conserve water and energy and shrink costs for American consumers,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “The construction of the first WaterSense labeled homes, and the plans to build more, mark the beginning of an innovative approach that gives homeowners the chance to cut their water and energy bills and protect a vital environmental resource.”
 

Since signing on as the first national builder to partner with WaterSense, KB Home has agreed to build three communities of homes that will earn the WaterSense label, which will be the first in the nation to meet WaterSense criteria for newly built homes. Each house includes WaterSense labeled plumbing fixtures, an efficient hot water delivery system, water-efficient landscape design, and other water and energy-efficient features. 

Each WaterSense labeled new home is independently inspected and certified to ensure EPA’s criteria are met for both water efficiency and performance. A WaterSense labeled new home is built to use about 20 percent less water than a typical new home. 

EPA estimates that if the approximately 500,000 new homes built last year had met WaterSense criteria, the homes would save Americans 5 billion gallons of water and more than $50 million in utility bills annually. 

More information on WaterSense: 
http://www.epa.gov/watersense


We talk a lot about "bioremediation" at Bio-Dry...

What is Bioremediation? 

Bioremediation allows natural processes to clean up harmful chemicals in the environment. Microscopic “bugs” or microbes that live in soil and groundwater like to eat certain harmful chemicals, such as those found in gasoline and oil spills. When microbes completely digest these chemicals, they change them into water and harmless gases such as carbon dioxide.

How does it work? 

 In order for microbes to clean up harmful chemicals, the right temperature, nutrients (fertilizers), and amount of oxygen must be present in the soil and groundwater. These conditions allow the microbes to grow and multiply—and eat more chemicals. When conditions are not right, microbes grow too slowly or die. Or they can create more harmful chemicals. If conditions are not right at a site, EPA works to improve them. One way they improve conditions is to pump air, nutrients, or other substances (such as molasses) underground. 

Sometimes microbes are added if enough aren’t already there. The right conditions for bioremediation cannot always be achieved underground. At some sites, the weather is too cold or the soil is too dense. At such sites, EPA might dig up the soil to clean it above ground where heaters and soil mixing help improve conditions. After the soil is dug up, the proper nutrients are added. Oxygen also may be added by stirring the mixture or by forcing air through it. However, some microbes work better without oxygen. With the right temperature and amount of oxygen and nutrients, microbes can do their work to “bioremediate” the harmful chemicals.

Sometimes mixing soil can cause harmful chemicals to evaporate before the microbes can eat them. To prevent these chemicals from polluting the air, EPA mixes the soil inside a special tank or building where chemicals that evaporate can be collected and treated.

Microbes can help clean polluted groundwater as well as soil. To do this, EPA drills wells and pumps some of the groundwater into tanks. Here, the water is mixed with nutrients and air before it is pumped back into the ground. The added nutrients and air help the microbes bioremediate the groundwater. Groundwater can also be mixed underground by pumping nutrients and air into the wells.

Once harmful chemicals are cleaned up and microbes have eaten their available “food,” the microbes die.

Is bioremediation safe? 

Bioremediation is very safe because it relies on microbes that naturally occur in soil. These microbes are helpful and pose no threat to people at the site or in the community. Microbes themselves won’t hurt you, but never touch the polluted soil or groundwater—especially before eating. No dangerous chemicals are used in bioremediation. The nutrients added to make microbes grow are fertilizers commonly used on lawns and gardens. Because bioremediation changes the harmful chemicals into water and harmless gases, the harmful chemicals are completely destroyed. To ensure that bioremediation is working, EPA tests samples of soil and groundwater.

 

For more information, check out this EPA Citizen’s Guide:
http://www.epa.gov/tio/download/citizens/bioremediation.pdf


Fines Fines and more fines!

Posted by: Jon in Bio-Dry

More and more pressure washing companies are telling the grueling story about getting fines from  state and local regulatory agencies for pressure washing without re-capturing.  One Houston Bio-Dry customer paid $10,000 for his fine for pressure washing.  Wal Mart is now requiring all of their pressure washing vendors to re-capture all their water.  Even if the pressure washing is for front areas of the store you have to have the equipment to re-capture all your water.

With Bio-Dry there is NO WATER.  For high traffic oil and grease areas like banks, fast food, gas station and any areas where cars come to rest, these are candidates for waterless concrete cleaning.  Bio-Dry is WATERLESS CONCRETE CLEANING.  Patented because of its unique qualities Bio-Dry concrete cleaning is less expensive, improves image and saves money.  Pressure wash your house but for oil use waterless concrete cleaner--Bio-Dry.


Place your mouse over these images to see the power of Bio-Dry

Bio-Dry User Testimonials

JGB Enterprises Inc. told us:

As a power washing company, Bio-Dry has helped cut my labor costs in half and doubled my revenue over the last few years! The uses for Bio-Dry as an alternative to power washing is endless and has increased my customer base