Rodents menace in hospitals

Hospitals are supposed to be visiting places for patients, but these days invasive pests to have started visiting them.

Rodents like rats, mice, squirrels, etc. are easily found in the areas of hospitals. They are just not found but are known to cause a nuisance in the areas of hospitals.

What attracts these pests in the hospitals?

They get attracted to the food available in the hospital canteens. Caretakers of patients carry food along with them in the hospitals. Many times the carried food is dropped on the flooring. The pest easily gets attracted to these sources of food.

There are limited trash bins available in the hospital areas, which get flooded with the trash. The pesky rodents easily get attracted to this.

There are polymeric applications available such as wires and cables, pipes, surgical instruments etc. available in hospitals to which the pests get attracted. The pests are fond of the colors and smell of the polymeric applications which easily brings the pests in the hospitals.

The hospitals provide with a safe nesting area for rodents. The ceilings, decks, laundry areas, kitchens etc. are places where the rodents nest. The atmosphere in the hospitals is preferable for the rodents to rest.

Their nuisance does not stop just damaging the materials from the hospital but also goes up to threatening patient’s lives, and this is for real!

Indore: Rodents attack COVID-19 victim’s body, probe ordered

Written by

Shalini Ojha

A family in Indore, who lost a member to the coronavirus, was given another shock when they saw that his body was seemingly eaten by rodents.

The deceased, 87-year-old Naveenchandra Jain, breathed his last on Sunday at Unique Hospital, and his family was handed over the body in a white body bag a day later.

On seeing the body’s condition, the family obviously fumed.

When they received his mortal remains, the family saw Jain’s toes and face had bite marks.

Rats nibble on dead baby’s face in Telangana’s Narsapur hospital

The hospital has denied negligence on its partImage for representation

In a shocking incident, the body of a three-month-old baby was found chewed up by rats in the mortuary at Government Area Hospital in Narasapur in Telangana’s Medak district.

According to reports,  the baby girl was identified as the daughter of P Kishan and Surekha. The couple had been living separately due to a family dispute.

The police said that the infant, identified as Gnathi, had been ill for a few days with a high fever, and doctors had referred her to Niloufer Hospital in Hyderabad.

Since it was late on Thursday, the doctors said that an autopsy would be conducted the next day.

When the mother checked on the baby on Friday morning, Surekha found the baby’s face disfigured, as rats had chewed it off.

“Our daughter did not have any marks on her body. She was wrapped in a cloth and taken to the mortuary. I asked for a post-mortem only so that my husband wouldn’t say that I killed our baby due to negligence. I didn’t know it would result in this,” the mother was quoted as saying.

Hospitals are sensitive places where patients come to get a cure from the diseases they are suffering from. But what when the patients come across the rodents which are carriers of more than 200 deadly pathogens.

The sensitive places like hospitals should be kept rodent-free to avoid any mishap due to pest presence.

To keep rodents away from hospitals many ineffective control measures are used traditionally. These methods include the use of rat traps which do not work once mechanical damage is caused to them. The hospitals are fumigated, which is the most dangerous method of pest control. Glue boards are used that can be dangerous if a patient accidentally sticks to it. Rat poisons are used which are the potential of killing rodents and spreading the deadly diseases.

In a place, like a hospital effective and eco-friendly measures are necessary to keep these pests at a bay.

Is there such a solution available?

Yes, C Tech Corporation’s RodrepelTM is the best solution to keep rodents away from the hospital and hence from human contact.

RodrepelTM is a low-toxic, non-hazardous, and rodent aversive. This product works on the mechanism of repellency. It does not harm or kill the target species but generate fear or trigger temporary discomfort within the pests that keep the pests away from the application. The unpleasant experience with the product is imprinted within an animal’s memory and passed on its progeny.

RodrepelTM is available in liquid concentrate which can be diluted in paints and can be applied on the interior and exterior of hospitals. The product is safe for use in the patient’s room and operation theatres. The product can be used in the medicine storage areas to keep the pests out of these places. The kitchen and pantry can be painted using this product. The laundry area is dreaded with pests as well where this product can be applied.

The product is available in lacquer form which is a direct application. The lacquer can be applied to the furniture and other wooden accessories used in hospitals. It can be applied to already installed wires and cables, polymeric utility pipes, and equipment used in hospitals. The product is compatible with most of the surfaces like metal, wood, concrete, polymer, ceramic, etc.

The product available in the form of masterbatch can be incorporated into the polymeric applications like wires and cables, pipes, equipment, and accessories from hospitals while they are manufactured.

RodrepelTM triggers a fear response in rodents thus protecting the application. It causes severe temporary distress to the mucous membrane of the rodents due to which the pest stays away from the application. The product triggers an unpleasant reaction in case if the pest tries to gnaw away the application. After encountering the above-mentioned emotions, the animal instinctively perceives it with something it should stay away from and stores this information for future reference. The fact that certain rodents are repelled is mimicked by other rodents as well. Thus, the other rodents too stay away from the applications. The unpleasant experience is imprinted within the animal’s memory and passed on to its progeny.

The product is compliant with RoHS, RoHS2, RoHS3, REACH, APVMA, NEA, BPR, and FIFRA exempted.

If you are facing problems from these pests that contact us on technical.marketing@ctechcorporation.com

Also, visit our websites:

http://www.ctechcorporation.com/
http://www.rodrepel.com/
http://www.termirepel.com/
http://www.combirepel.com/

Follow our Facebook pages at:

1] https://www.facebook.com/Combirepel-411710912249274/
2] https://www.facebook.com/Termirepel-104225413091251/
3] https://www.facebook.com/Rodrepel-120734974768048/

Follow us on our Twitter pages at:

1] https://twitter.com/rodrepel
2] https://twitter.com/termirepel
3] https://twitter.com/combirepel

Power outage by squirrel leads to massive loss

If your power has gone out on a beautiful day, you may have been a victim of rodent attacks.  Most of the time squirrels are responsible for an impressive number of electric issues each year. The electrical disruption caused by a squirrel and other rodents is common and widespread. Squirrels are among the top responsible for power outages across the US and other countries in the world.

Squirrel, rat, and birds are mainly responsible for power outages across the world and affect millions of people. Power outages in the defense sector lead to huge losses to the nation and its security. Researchers are searching for a permanent solution to set out these issues.

Squirrels cause 30% of power outages

By Keith Lawrence

Sep 21, 2020 

For Owensboro Municipal Utilities, squirrels are public enemy No. 1.

Sonya Dixon, public relations and communications manager at OMU, says 30% of the utility’s power outages since June 1 have been caused by squirrels.

That damage cost OMU $20,000 for repairs.

And squirrels have accounted for six disruptions on OMU’s fibernet service during the same period, Dixon said.

One outage on Aug. 21 cost $20,000 to repair, she said.

“They are very destructive,” she said. “We have wildlife guards on our equipment, but squirrels are very difficult to keep out. They’re very stubborn and very innovative.”

Power restored to customers after squirrel causes fire at Kettering DP&L substation

By Jeremy P. Kelley

KETTERING — a squirrel that caused damage to equipment was blamed for a fire at a DP&L substation in Kettering that initially knocked out power to nearly 23,000 people, according to a DP&L spokesperson. 

The fire was first reported at the substation on East Dorothy Lane west of Wilmington Pike in Kettering around 7:40 a.m. Monday.

As of 10:35 a.m., the only school without power was Orchard Park Elementary, which is located just a few hundred yards down the street from the substation where the fire broke out, according to Kettering schools spokeswoman Kari Basson. 

Power had returned to Van Buren Middle School, Fairmont High School, and Oak view Elementary by 10:30 a.m. previously, power was restored to Beaver town Elementary and the district’s central offices and bus garage before 9 a.m. 

Basson said the district’s food and nutrition department is planning cold lunches at Fairmont and Van Buren because of how late the power came back on. Orchard Park Elementary is ordering pizza for the students.

We’ll continue to update this story as we learn more. 

At C Tech Corporation, we manufacture a product named Rodrepel™ which is an anti-rodent and animal aversive repellent which is a non- toxic, non- hazardous and environmentally safe solution. The product works on the mechanism of repellence and does not kill the target species but repel them. The product is effective against rodents and does not cause any harm to humans and other non-target species.

Rodrepel™ is available in the form of a masterbatch, liquid concentrate, lacquer, wood polish additive, and sprays.

Rodrepel™ masterbatch- can be incorporated into polymeric applications like wires and cables, pipes and polymeric equipment, etc.

Rodrepel™ liquid concentrate- can be mixed in paints in a pre-determined ratio and be applied to the interior and exterior walls of the power station, transformer box, electric control panels system, buildings, etc. to repel rodents from the area.

Rodrepel™ lacquer- is compatible with most of the surfaces like metal, wood, concrete, polymer, ceramic, etc. It can be applied to metal fencing, transformer box, electrical control panel system and other electrical equipment used at the power stations.

Rodrepel™ spray– is an easy to use product and available in two forms i.e. sticky & non- sticky. The sticky spray can be applied to wires and cables, pipes, etc. for long term protection against rodent attack whereas the non- sticky sprays are used for general purpose anywhere and everywhere.

Rodrepel™ wood polish additive- can be mixed with wood polish and then be applied on wooden articles and objects to protect them from rodent attacks.

Our product is RoHS, RoHS2, RoHS3, APVMA, NEA, EU BPR compliant and FIFRA exempted. Hence by using Rodrepel™ you can get rid of the rodent damages.

Contact us at technical.marketing@ctechcorporation.com if you’re facing problems with pests and get the best remedies to combat the pest menace.

Also, visit our websites:

http://www.ctechcorporation.com/
http://www.rodrepel.com/
http://www.termirepel.com/
http://www.combirepel.com/

Follow our Facebook pages at:

1] https://www.facebook.com/Combirepel-411710912249274/
2] https://www.facebook.com/Termirepel-104225413091251/
3] https://www.facebook.com/Rodrepel-120734974768048/

Follow us on our Twitter pages at:

1] https://twitter.com/rodrepel
2] https://twitter.com/termirepel
3] https://twitter.com/combirepel

Squirrel Power: Behind your power outages

These days, the number of animal lovers is gradually increasing and it’s good to be an animal lover but what if some of these creatures are eating up your gadgets and thus not allowing you to take advantage of some of the greatest inventions by the mankind. Shocking?? Yes, but it is true!!

Believe it or not, a certain furry rodent is responsible for more than half of U.S. power outages. Sometimes rodents gnaw through insulation guarding power lines and sometimes they end up lurking in high voltage system due to their inability to read the high warnings. There have been myriad cases of damages to power systems. In June 2015, squirrels caused a power outage for 45,000 people in East Bay, Berkeley in the USA. Another incident of March 2013 shows that these rodents are suicide bombers where a rat caused a power outage in Japan’s Fukushima nuclear power plant. The damage caused by rodents proves to be very expensive for the plant and owner of the equipment. Rodents have a bad habit of chewing; therefore they are allured by wires and other appliances as they are hard and help them in sharpening their teeth

Squirrels often use power lines as their roadways; the line is high, convenient, and offer safe routes over roads, near to food-bearing trees and roof-lines. Of course, this means that squirrels can bridge the space between wires, transformer components, and other pieces of the electrical grid that can lead to a short circuit. What you’re left with is a dead squirrel and several people and businesses without power.

According to the American Public Power Association, the squirrels are a frequent cause of such power outages. These rodents are such a problem to the society that the American Public Power Association tracks the blackouts caused in America through the SquirrelIndex. These power outages and blackouts are increasing day by day and the worst part is that we cannot do much to prevent them.

The rodents are no less than a threat to cybersecurity. In 1987, a squirrel took out the data from NASDAQ computer centers which eventually lead to the loss in trading. There have been various such cases. There is even a site, CyberSquirrel.com which especially runs to create awareness about the harm caused by these rodents to cybersecurity. CyberSquirrel, an organization that tracks the outages caused by the furry beasts, says it logged 560 events in 2015 in the state of Montana alone.Yes, the squirrel is a bigger threat to cybersecurity than hackers, and there’s data to back this up. According to the officials of Georgia Power (US), squirrels can cause up to $2 million dollars’ worth of damage yearly. To avoid these issues, one must take precautions.

Most electrical cables are jacketed or sheathed by several layers of electrically insulating materials such as lead, rubber, jute, cotton, tar asphalt, or various synthetic resins. A layer of steel or copper tape is often wrapped about the insulated cable to protect it from external damage, and finally, a water repellent layer or coating is added to prevent corrosion of the metal tape. Although the deterioration of electric cables is usually caused by mechanical, electrical and chemical forces, it can also occur in consequence of biological processes. On or more of the layers of protective or jacketing materials is often destroyed by microorganisms, marine invertebrates, insects, rodents, or other gnawing animals.

Squirrel causes power outage

Sep 14, 2020

A squirrel in power lines caused an outage in the downtown area of Morristown for almost three hours Sunday, officials said.

Jody Wigington, general manager and CEO of Morristown Utilities, said Monday that the power outage first happened at 7:32 a.m. Power was restored by 10:33 a.m., he said.

“It was due to a line that burned down on Daisy Street,” he said.

The downed lines led to some traffic lights going down. A couple of traffic lights were off on East Morris Boulevard.

Wigington said it took some time to find the source of the outage because it was in a difficult location to pinpoint.

This Threat To America’s Energy Grid Is Driving Security Experts Nuts

Posted to Energy April 10th 2019 by Erin Mundahl

Last week, President Donald Trump released an executive order intended to protect the U.S. from electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attacks against the electric grid. But there is another threat to the grid, one that is far more low-tech and far more common, than a smuggled EMP device:

Squirrels.

“I’m all for increasing grid resilience, but here’s a threat priority list: 1. Squirrels 2. Tree branches 3. Heat waves/hurricanes/other climate-amplified threats” joked Costa Samaras, an Adjunct Senior Researcher at the RAND Corporation in a tweet.

He may have been joking, but his math is dead on.  For a small mammal, squirrels cause a surprising amount of damage to the grid. In 2016 alone, utilities reported 3,456 outages caused by squirrels, cutting off power to more than 193,873 customers. These incidents are more common in the spring and fall but can happen throughout the year.

To try to stop the furry menaces and to keep equipment safe, utility companies employ a variety of deterrents like wheels, cages, and guards. Despite these efforts, squirrels are a constant operating hazard.

According to CyberSquirrel1, a website and Twitter feed that tracks “all unclassified Cyber Squirrel Operations that have been released to the public that we have been able to confirm,” squirrels have caused 1,254 outages since 2013. These include a fire department call for an “exploding squirrel” that caused a neighborhood in Massachusetts to lose power last month and 135 customers in New Hampshire who temporarily lost power because of a squirrel on March 12, 2019.

The damage caused by rodents proves to be very expensive for the plant and owner of the equipment.

So then what’s the solution? This question has been answered by C Tech Corporation’s RodrepelTM. It acts as an effective way to repel rodents, overcoming the limitations of the general rodenticides. The general properties of RodrepelTM are:

•     Low toxic

•     Low hazardous

•     Non volatile

•     Environmentally safe

RodrepelTM does not kill but only keeps the animal away by making use of the sensory mechanisms. The product functions from a distance generating a typical fear response in the animal. Thus, RodrepelTM actually helps in modifying animal behavior. Rodents being social animals also communicate the bad experience to their population in the vicinity.

The masterbatch of RodrepelTM can be incorporated into wires and cables.

The product in the form of liquid concentrate can be diluted in Paints and organic solvents and applied to cables. The lacquer which is a topical application can be directly applied to the already installed wires and cables.

Our newly developed product,  Rodrepel™ Rodent Repellent Spray is an easy to use product which can be sprayed on wires and cables, electronic appliances, cabinets, so as to as avoid the rodents from entering them.

RodrepelTM is RoHS, RoHS2, RoHS3, REACH, NEA, EU BPR, APVMA compliant and FIFRA exempted.

Contact us at technical.marketing@ctechcorporation.com if you’re facing problems with rodents and get best remedies to combat the rodent menace.

Also, visit our websites:

http://www.ctechcorporation.com/
http://www.rodrepel.com/
http://www.termirepel.com/
http://www.combirepel.com/

Follow our Facebook pages at:

1] https://www.facebook.com/Combirepel-411710912249274/
2] https://www.facebook.com/Termirepel-104225413091251/
3] https://www.facebook.com/Rodrepel-120734974768048/

Follow us on our Twitter pages at:

1] https://twitter.com/rodrepel
2] https://twitter.com/termirepel
3] https://twitter.com/combirepel

Rat’s infestation in a house

Rats can make a home almost anywhere on the planet and survive in any circumstances. They infest homes, agriculture, food and they easily adjust to the environment. They are found near the grain storage field or near to poultry or other farms, buildings, industrial sites where the food is available. You can always find them in your cupboards, kitchen, storage room, back yard, kitchen gardens and almost everywhere around human beings.

Rat infestation in the house causes great damage to our living place mainly to food storage in the kitchen, cables, wires, books and clothes, and pipes as well! Rats try to gnaw or bite almost everything they wish to feed, which causes great loss of money.

Many of us tried to trap or have used products to keep rodents away from the house. Many of them succeeded to trap them or get rid of them temporarily. But the rats are now familiar with all these tricks and they have developed themselves to encounter such situations. Many rats live in sewage pipes and underground waste pipes and they can carry bacteria when they enter kitchens and food storage as they leave their stamp everywhere and anywhere which is highly dangerous to health especially kids in the house.

Killing rats is not the solution as it will affect the Eco-cycle or say food chain of environment because many creatures feed on them to survive on earth and so on.

Hundreds of rat infestation reports made in Solihull

By David IrwinLocal Democracy Reporter

Hundreds of reports of rat infestations were made by residents in Solihull last year.

A breakdown of the appointments that the borough’s pest control team attended in 2018/19 revealed that the lion’s share were in relation to the rodents.

Over the course of the 12 months, the exterminators were contacted about rats on 858 occasions – accounting for almost half of their 1,800 plus appointments.

Second on the list, in terms of the number of call-outs, was wasps and hornets; there were 558 appointments linked to the insects.

Rats are seen as a public health risk and can also pose a threat to buildings.

Mice were placed third (222 appointments) and there was also a surprising number of cases involving squirrels (88).

The remainder of the cases mostly related to various species of insect.

Rats are usually the type of vermin that causes people the most concern, not least because the animals spread a number of diseases.

On its website, the British Pest Control Association outlines some of the other potential problems.

“Rats can inflict an enormous amount of structural damage,” they said.

“They can cause severe fires by gnawing away the insulation around electrical cables, floods by puncturing pipes and even death by chewing through gas pipes.

“The insurance sector has estimated that rodent damage to wiring is responsible for 25 per cent of all electrical fires in buildings.”

There are various reasons why the rodents may present a problem, including food waste not being properly disposed of, nests being disturbed or defective drains inside people’s homes.

It tends to be more common to spot brown rats inside properties during the autumn and winter months, when the animals typically take shelter.

You can use products that repel these rodents instead of killing them thus balancing the eco-system.

At C Tech Corporation we provide you with an effective solution. Our product RodrepelTM is developed by using green technology. It is an extremely low concern, low toxic, low hazardous and non-mutagenic animal aversive. It is durable under extreme climatic conditions.

Our product works on the mechanism of repellency. The product triggers a fear response in rodents thus protecting the application. It causes severe temporary distress to the mucous membrane of the rodents due to which the pest stays away from the application. The product triggers an unpleasant reaction in case if the pest tries to gnaw away the application. After encountering the above-mentioned emotions, the animal instinctively perceives it with something it should stay away from and stores this information for future reference. The fact that certain rodents are repelled is mimicked by other rodents as well. Thus, the other rodents too stay away from the applications. The unpleasant experience is imprinted within the animal’s memory and passed on to its progeny.

Our product is RoHS, RoHS2, RoHS3, REACH, EU BPR, APVMA, NEA compliant and FIFRA exempted. Our product does not cause harm to target as well as non-targeted species. It just repels them from the applied product. It works on the mechanism of repellency.

RodrepelTM is available in the forms of masterbatch, liquid concentrate, and lacquer.

Masterbatch can be incorporated into polymeric applications like fencing, water pipes, agricultural films, polymeric tree guards, wires, cables, etc. This would result in the final application being rodent repellent.

The liquid concentrate can be mixed in paints in a pre-determined ratio and be applied to the interior and exterior of houses, ceilings, gardens, farms, outhouses, etc. to repel roof rats from the area required.

Lacquer form can be directly applied to the already installed application such as attics, wooden fences, guards, pipes, wires, cables, etc. The lacquer is compatible with most of the surfaces like metal, wood, concrete, polymer, ceramic, etc.

We have developed our product in the form of a spray, the RodrepelTM rodent repellent spray which is an easy to use product. The product can be sprayed on components from warehouses, storage areas, attics, homes, etc. after clearing the dust and waste from components.

Hence by using RodrepelTM, homes, farms, and gardens can be prevented from roof rat damage effectively and considerably.

Contact us at technical.marketing@ctechcorporation.com if you’re facing problems with rodents and get the best remedies to combat the pest menace.

Also, visit our websites:

http://www.ctechcorporation.com/
http://www.rodrepel.com/
http://www.termirepel.com/
http://www.combirepel.com/

Follow our Facebook pages at:

1] https://www.facebook.com/Combirepel-411710912249274/
2] https://www.facebook.com/Termirepel-104225413091251/
3] https://www.facebook.com/Rodrepel-120734974768048/

Follow us on our Twitter pages at:
1] https://twitter.com/rodrepel
2] https://twitter.com/termirepel
3] https://twitter.com/combirepel

Super giants at supermarkets

Rodents belong to the family of Rodentia, the single largest group of rodents. About 40% of all mammals’ species are rodents. These rodents are found worldwide. The distinguishing feature of the rodents is their pairs of continuously growing, razor-sharp incisors. In order to avoid the overgrowth of these incisors, they gnaw objects around them. Rodents are prone to invading different places for nesting. They prefer places which provide them with food and protection from their natural predators.

Rodents use their sense of smell to find food. Though herbivorous, they can eat a wide variety of stuff. They eat fruits, vegetables, cereal grains; scavenge for scraps left by a larger predator. Supermarkets provide with a wide variety of food and household products. The main purpose of rodents entering the supermarkets is the food availability there. Here they find a variety of foodstuff to munch, along with a safe place to nest.

Rodents that seem very big can slide in like a jelly into the tightest of gaps and holes. They can enter supermarkets in many ways like roof joints, electrical cable entry holes, AC chases etc.

To ensure the presence of rodents, one can look for chewed wires, droppings, rat nest, chewed wood, and chewed insulation on pipes.

Rats are potent of spreading diseases like Salmonellosis, caused by consuming food or water that is contaminated by rat feces. Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) is another deadly disease. HPS is transmitted by infected rodents through their urine, droppings, or saliva. Leptospirosis and rat-bite fever are caused by eating food or drinking water contaminated with urine from infected rodents.

Common insects that sneak into food supplies are ants, flour beetles, saw-toothed grain beetles, and carpet beetles. At times the food packets at supermarkets are found holed. Ants readily get attracted to such food. There are chances that the same foodstuff is being purchased by customers and later consumed. Cockroaches find easy access to the stored food. They eat rotten canned food and thus carry the same with them all over the places they travel. Such circumstances may give rise to the spread of diseases.

Grains are stored in a lot at supermarkets. These grains become a great treat for the rodents, and insects as well. Grains are mainly stored in burlap or plastic bags, metal or plastic container. Rodents are capable of chewing burlap bags easily, but if given enough time they can chew metal and plastic cans as well.

The conditions which encourage these insects getting into the grains are high grain temperature and moisture. Availability of such appropriate conditions increases the chances of insect survival and reproduction. To find bugs in breakfast cereals is too common because even bugs like to eat what we eat. Indian meal moths are very commonly found in grocery shops and supermarkets. Nuts are their favorite food.

These insects are the primary or intermediate hosts or carrier of human diseases. There are many bacterial diseases that are transmitted in some form of fecal contamination of food or water; either directly or indirectly. House flies are the primary agent in the spread of these diseases.

Mice likely cause of holes in baby food packaging at Countdown supermarkets after ‘infestation’ at two distribution centres

Donna-Lee Biddle and Georgia-May Gilbertson22:00, Aug 30 2020

Mice are believed to have nibbled on baby food packaging that was found on several supermarket shelves.

Holes in dozens of squeezable pouches of baby food found on supermarket shelves were likely caused by a “mice infestation”.

Damaged pouches were found in about 30 packages of baby food at six supermarkets in Auckland – five Countdowns and a SuperValue – and a Countdown in Napier, in recent days.

The discovery sparked a police investigation but Countdown determined it was actually caused by mice.

Supermarket giant Asda has been fined £300,000 after a home delivery depot Inspection found dead mice and flies near the food

Inspectors found dead mice and flies in the bread section while mouse droppings littered the shelves.

Baking ingredients were found gnawed by rodents, with fly pupae shells under shelves, spilt food and rotting coriander were also discovered in a catalogue of disgusting finds.

From the above mentioned interesting news articles, it is clear that the damage due to rodents and insects is not only limited to food but also to humans. Killing them won’t be a good way of getting rid of them as there is a possibility that the killed rodents and insects spread foul smell around the supermarket. It can be hazardous even if one of these creatures dies in the supermarket. Using pesticides would not only kill the target species but will also cause harm to the humans as well as to other animals. So the mechanism of repelling would be more effective here.

A unique and environmentally friendly solution would be just appropriate for overcoming this problem.

C Tech Corporation has come up with an optimal solution to counteract problems caused by such creatures.

Our product Rodrepel™ will solve these problems effectively. Rodrepel™ is a blend of extremely low concern, non-toxic, non-carcinogenic and non-mutagenic compounds. It is an environmentally friendly animal and insect aversive.

It is a broad-spectrum animal aversive majorly designed to repel rodents and insects but is highly effective against other animals like rabbits and bears. It works by the action of repellence due to which it drives the rodents and insects away from the application. It has been designed for polymeric applications and natural materials like wood.

Our product is available in the forms of masterbatch, liquid concentrate and lacquer form. Supermarkets can bring in use these products to shield the food racks and other accessible points from wherein rodents and insects try getting in the supermarket. Thus our products will help to safeguard food.

Eat healthily, stay healthy!

If you are facing problems from the sneaky pests then contact us on:
technical.marketing@ctechcorporation.com

Also, visit our websites:

http://www.ctechcorporation.com/
http://www.rodrepel.com/
http://www.termirepel.com/
http://www.combirepel.com/

Follow our Facebook pages at:

1] https://www.facebook.com/Combirepel-411710912249274/
2] https://www.facebook.com/Termirepel-104225413091251/
3] https://www.facebook.com/Rodrepel-120734974768048/

Follow us on our Twitter pages at:

1] https://twitter.com/rodrepel
2] https://twitter.com/termirepel
3] https://twitter.com/combirepel