computer recycling near me

American e-waste is causing a 'hidden tsunami' in Southeast Asia, watchdog report says

ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL Associated Press

HANOI, Vietnam — Millions of tons of discarded electronics from the United States are being shipped overseas, much of it to developing countries in Southeast Asia unprepared to safely handle hazardous waste, according to a new report by an environmental watchdog.

The Seattle-based Basel Action Network, or BAN, said last week that a two-year investigation found at least 10 U.S. companies exporting used electronics to Asia and the Middle East, in what it says is a "hidden tsunami" of electronic waste.

"This new, almost invisible tsunami of e-waste, is taking place ... padding already lucrative profit margins of the electronics recycling sector while allowing a major portion of the American public's and corporate IT equipment to be surreptitiously exported to and processed under harmful conditions in Southeast Asia," the report said. READ MORE…

Private Equity Investors Continue to See the Potential in ITAD and Ecycling with Major Investment

The global ITAD market was valued at $18 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $41 billion by 2032, a CAGR of nearly 11 percent

DMD Systems Recovery, a provider of IT asset disposition (ITAD) services, has received a majority equity investment from Tailwind Capital.

DMD’s ITAD services include data center decommissioning, asset auditing, secure data wiping, deinstallation, lease return management, and secure disposal for large enterprises, including Fortune 500 corporations, financial institutions, healthcare providers, technology companies, government agencies, and multinational firms across 50 countries.

By John McNulty