SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Looking out from a downtown San Francisco rooftop, Epic Cleantec co-founder and CEO Aaron Tartakovsky says you can actually see the future of recycled water. "This is not ...
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Epic Cleantec (“Epic”), a leading innovator in water reuse technology for the built environment, today announced the close of its $12 million Series B funding round.
Epic Cleantec Partners with Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills to Implement Innovative Water Reuse System
The OneWater™ reuse system, designed and operated by Epic Cleantec, will recycle nearly a half million gallons of water annually, contributing to California’s water conservation efforts LOS ...
Shower Hour IPA and Laundry Club Kölsch, Epic’s two beer styles, are category-defining brews made with a uniquely sustainable ingredient: recycled water. The world’s first commercial beer made from ...
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- California is no stranger to drought. The worry about water usage is an ongoing concern for homeowners and businesses alike, but at the Waldorf Astoria in Beverly Hills, the lush ...
Epic's OneWater Rain system is an advanced, modular water recycling solution that captures and purifies rainwater and HVAC condensate for reuse across a range of non-potable applications, including ...
Epic Cleantec's systems collect water just from showers and laundries and then run it through several treatment steps, including reverse osmosis. The clean water is then taken to Devil's Canyon ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min The beer is real, but there's a ...
You wouldn’t know if you tasted it, but Epic OneWater Brew is a beer with a peculiar ingredient: it’s made with water recycled from the showers, sinks and washing machines of a residential building.
Epic Cleantec describes itself as a “pioneer in onsite water reuse solutions for the real estate industry.” ...
The bulk of water recycling now happens at centralized wastewater treatment plants, requiring thousands of miles of pipelines to move the water. This practice is neither efficient nor cheap. But as ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results