Reclamation Before Disposal
We always look for reclamation before disposal — but we'll tell you honestly when a market doesn't exist. Reuse and recycling pathways for hazardous waste are limited, case-by-case, and often sensitive to commodity prices. That said, the savings are real when the option is available, and we actively pursue them for every eligible stream.
A Streamlined Compliance Path
Universal waste regulations reduce the paperwork burden for commonly generated waste streams like batteries, lamps, and electronics. For LQGs managing these separately from fully regulated hazardous waste, the compliance delta is significant.
Lead-acid, lithium, Ni-Cd, alkaline — collected, consolidated, and routed to reclamation facilities where feasible.
Fluorescent, HID, LED — mercury recovery and glass recycling through certified downstream partners.
Computers, monitors, UPS batteries, telecom equipment. R2-certified downstream processors.
Certified Downstream Chain
Electronic scrap recycling requires downstream transparency. We partner exclusively with R2-certified processors who can document the full chain of custody from our drop-off to final material recovery. No offshore shipping. No informal sector. No dumped ash.
Value Back to Your Process
When metal concentrations justify it — often with plating baths, rinse waters, and metal-bearing sludges — we route to recovery facilities that can extract and return value. For lower-concentration streams, stabilization and disposal is typically more economical, and we'll tell you which is which.
Energy Recovery Where It Makes Sense
Used oil, oily water, and off-spec fuels are strong candidates for fuel blending — recovered as supplemental fuel at permitted facilities instead of incinerated for destruction only. For most organic waste streams, this is the most economical disposal option. We route when the chemistry and volume support it.