ROTO is nominated for the German Business Award 2023/24. 🇩🇪🇸🇮

ROTO nominated for the German Business Award 2023/24. 🇩🇪🇸🇮The German-Slovene Chamber of Commerce and Industry (AHK Slowenien) is again presenting this year’s German Business Award in cooperation with two renowned partners: the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Ljubljana and the IEDC – Bled School of Management

The award aims to recognise significant technological and economic innovations by companies that have a long-term positive impact on society.

This year, we are focusing on the green transformation of industry. ♻️

The ROTO Group, which is 100% Slovenian family-owned, has been present on the German market since 1996. The subsidiary Roto Wasser Deutschland also has a strong development department for wastewater treatment plants in Germany, a sales and technical after-sales team and its own logistics centre.

The nominated companies are leaders in the field of environmental protection; Roto in particular with its water purification technologies, the use of recycled plastics for high-tech products, which is extremely important for the future of our economy and planet. 🌍

Speakers at the award ceremony will include Dagmar von Bohnstein, President of AHK, Eva Ricarda Willems, Deputy Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany in Slovenia, and Matjaž Han, Minister of Economy, Tourism and Sport.

🔥NEW🔥

Instructions for the installation and maintenance of ROTO cleaning devices are now also available in digital format. Scan the QR code on the product and select your language. 👍 We take care of pure nature and enable user-friendly handling of the product. 😎 More at 👉 www.rotoEco.eu

Rainwater can be recycled and reused

There’s something about being at home while it’s raining outside that makes you feel more comfortable and safe inside. Of course, you can’t avoid the rain if you have to go to work or pick up your children from school. But if you have the opportunity to stay at home, you can enjoy the rain hitting the windows while you safely clean up.

Obligations can’t be avoided, but if you’re invited somewhere and you’re in no mood to go out if the skies open, that’s a great reason to stay where you are. Precipitation is also something very contemplative, as it physically changes our surroundings for a while, and it’s easy to get lost in its horizontal mist as it falls to the ground. And taking some time to think things through is never a bad thing.

This is essential for your garden. Plants and flowers love rain. After the rain, they will look more lush, green and clean than they have in a long time. Household water helps and does enough to keep your garden in good condition, but without sufficient rainfall your greenery would not survive as long as it does.

It’s all about chemistry, as air is 78% nitrogen, which is essential to keeping your plants looking green and vibrant. Nitrates and ammonium are obtained through precipitation, and the roots and leaves gladly accept them. Rainwater is also very rich in oxygen, which often helps when the soil is saturated after a downpour. Important plant micronutrients such as zinc, manganese, copper and iron are usually locked in the local soil, but are released after heavy rains.

Rainwater can be recycled and reused

We often see rain as an obstacle in everyday life, because it drenches us or prevents us from doing certain activities. But rain doesn’t just hinder us to hinder us, it can be beneficial to our daily lives when used properly.

If you’ve never heard of rainwater harvesting, it’s about capturing, filtering, cleaning and reusing rainwater for domestic use. Instead of letting rainwater run off your home’s roof through gutters and down the drain, you can collect it in water tanks. In a time of environmental awareness, this is a great opportunity to go greener at home.

Depending on the system installed, the collected rainwater can be used to water the garden, wash the car, flush the toilet and wash clothes. Not only that, but by reusing rainwater, you can lower your water bills (if you have a meter) and your wastewater disposal costs. After the initial investment in a home system, it’s completely free and offers fantastic long-term savings – and requires almost no maintenance.

Lower temperatures are good for the skin.

We often hear that prolonged exposure to UV rays can be harmful to our skin and health (and remember that sunburn is actually caused by genetic damage to cells in the outer layer of the skin), but the opposite is true in cold weather.

Moderately cold temperatures can be beneficial to your skin’s health by constricting blood vessels. As a result, they are less prone to swelling and redness, as blood flow increases. Plus, your body produces less sebum and oil in the winter, which should mean you have fewer breakouts.

It rains more often in the colder months of the year, so the change in temperature can have a beneficial effect on your complexion. Of course, avoid prolonged exposure to extremely low temperatures, as this can dry out your skin, leading to other complications.

You can do the following things.

One of the pitfalls of modern life is that weekdays are filled with responsibilities, and there’s never enough time to do anything else during the weekends. Life can be manic, but when it starts to rain, it’s almost as if Mother Nature has hit the pause button so we can focus on other activities.

When it rains, you’re likely to stay indoors, which is a great opportunity to finally finish the DIY jobs that have been nagging at you for months, or to devote more time to your favorite hobby. Or it could simply mean spending more quality time at home with your significant other and/or children.

If you stay at home on a rainy day, you can relax and do nothing or take advantage of the extra time. It all depends on your personality and how you feel at the moment, so don’t feel too guilty if you decide to indulge in rest instead.

Supernova Zagreb is water self-sufficient. 👌

Croatia is doing an exemplary job of encouraging water collection and treatment, including in commercial buildings.

Roto oil traps are installed in parking areas, Roterra water collectors in lawns, and grease traps separate animal and vegetable fats from water in restaurants and delicatessens. 👏

More on: www.rotoEco.eu

We did it! Our new factory and offices are officially open for business.

It has been a long time in the making, but in November 2022, we opened our new offices and 2,000 square metre factory.

The factory houses our new XXL rotomoulding machine, which is capable of producing items up to six metres wide with a capacity of up to 22,000 litres. We will also be able to assemble the products in the same place, limiting the movement of products, which will save us valuable time.

Congratulations to our skilled team for such a project in these challenging times.

What is virtual water? 💧

Although it sounds complicated, it’s simple. When we buy a product in a shop, we don’t see the water, we don’t take it home with us.
It is all that invisible water that goes into making or producing a product. Water used to produce, process or manufacture food, clothing, paper and other products is called “virtual water”. 💡 ☝
ROTO is also concerned about water reuse in industrial processing plants, as Ekoling d.o.o. , also part of the #ROTOgroup, offers solutions for processing plants in the meat, paper, dairy and manufacturing industries. 🍖 🏭
This is made possible by our dissolved air flotation (DAF) industrial water treatment technology. EkoFloat industrial water systems work on the principle of a dissolved air flotation (DAF) system, which is designed to remove common suspended solids, grease, oils and fats. Air in the water forms micron-sized bubbles that bind to the suspended solids, which then float to the surface of the water. The sludge is skimmed off the surface and the purified water flows away. 💧 ☝
Such purified water can be reused in an industrial plant. 👏 The paper industry is one of the biggest water consumers, alongside the food, chemical, primary metals and refined petroleum industries. In #Slovenia and #Sweden, the paper industry is even the biggest consumer of industrial water.

Image made by Virtual water | facebookcom/virtualwate

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Read more at : www.ekoling.si