Server farms typically refresh their equipment every three to five years. | Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock[/caption]
A data center decommissioning firm is expanding its operations, and a new company leader says this sector of the e-scrap industry will grow alongside the exponential increase in cloud computing.
ITRenew, based in Newark, Calif., is expanding its footprint with the opening of a 305,000-square-foot facility in the Midwest in 2020.
Although the company provides standard corporate IT asset disposition, ITRenew has made its focus data center decommissioning. Data centers are large facilities that house equipment for information storage, often used in the cloud computing sector. In addition to decommissioning, ITRenew sells data center equipment under the Sesame product line. Doing so allows the firm to maximize the value it can recover from retired assets.
Bill Vasquez, an ITAD expert with more than 20 years in the field, is leading the charge to expand ITRenew's server decommissioning services. ITRenew recently hired Vasquez and other key executives to grow the company. Vasquez previously worked as vice president of operations at Sims Recycling Solutions.
He told E-Scrap News he's seen significant growth in demand for ITAD services specific to server operations.
"The market built up pretty heavily in the last half decade as the shift to doing more servers has exploded, from laptops and PCs," Vasquez said. The cloud increase led ITRenew to target that specific market segment rather than CRT devices or other more traditional e-scrap materials.
ITRenew doubled its size in the past 18 months, Vasquez said, and the company is preparing to open a roughly 305,000-square-foot decommissioning facility in Kansas City in January. The company currently operates a decommissioning facility at its California headquarters and one in Virginia. The company also operates sites internationally, in Ireland, Singapore, Sweden and elsewhere.
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Server farms typically refresh their equipment every three to five years. | Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock[/caption]
A data center decommissioning firm is expanding its operations, and a new company leader says this sector of the e-scrap industry will grow alongside the exponential increase in cloud computing.
ITRenew, based in Newark, Calif., is expanding its footprint with the opening of a 305,000-square-foot facility in the Midwest in 2020.
Although the company provides standard corporate IT asset disposition, ITRenew has made its focus data center decommissioning. Data centers are large facilities that house equipment for information storage, often used in the cloud computing sector. In addition to decommissioning, ITRenew sells data center equipment under the Sesame product line. Doing so allows the firm to maximize the value it can recover from retired assets.
Bill Vasquez, an ITAD expert with more than 20 years in the field, is leading the charge to expand ITRenew's server decommissioning services. ITRenew recently hired Vasquez and other key executives to grow the company. Vasquez previously worked as vice president of operations at Sims Recycling Solutions.
He told E-Scrap News he's seen significant growth in demand for ITAD services specific to server operations.
"The market built up pretty heavily in the last half decade as the shift to doing more servers has exploded, from laptops and PCs," Vasquez said. The cloud increase led ITRenew to target that specific market segment rather than CRT devices or other more traditional e-scrap materials.
ITRenew doubled its size in the past 18 months, Vasquez said, and the company is preparing to open a roughly 305,000-square-foot decommissioning facility in Kansas City in January. The company currently operates a decommissioning facility at its California headquarters and one in Virginia. The company also operates sites internationally, in Ireland, Singapore, Sweden and elsewhere.

Server farms typically refresh their equipment every three to five years. | Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock[/caption]
A data center decommissioning firm is expanding its operations, and a new company leader says this sector of the e-scrap industry will grow alongside the exponential increase in cloud computing.
ITRenew, based in Newark, Calif., is expanding its footprint with the opening of a 305,000-square-foot facility in the Midwest in 2020.
Although the company provides standard corporate IT asset disposition, ITRenew has made its focus data center decommissioning. Data centers are large facilities that house equipment for information storage, often used in the cloud computing sector. In addition to decommissioning, ITRenew sells data center equipment under the Sesame product line. Doing so allows the firm to maximize the value it can recover from retired assets.
Bill Vasquez, an ITAD expert with more than 20 years in the field, is leading the charge to expand ITRenew's server decommissioning services. ITRenew recently hired Vasquez and other key executives to grow the company. Vasquez previously worked as vice president of operations at Sims Recycling Solutions.
He told E-Scrap News he's seen significant growth in demand for ITAD services specific to server operations.
"The market built up pretty heavily in the last half decade as the shift to doing more servers has exploded, from laptops and PCs," Vasquez said. The cloud increase led ITRenew to target that specific market segment rather than CRT devices or other more traditional e-scrap materials.
ITRenew doubled its size in the past 18 months, Vasquez said, and the company is preparing to open a roughly 305,000-square-foot decommissioning facility in Kansas City in January. The company currently operates a decommissioning facility at its California headquarters and one in Virginia. The company also operates sites internationally, in Ireland, Singapore, Sweden and elsewhere.
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