In Vancouver, Wash., Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility. The facility is now owned by Metro Metals Northwest. | Jared Paben/E-Scrap News[/caption]
A major Pacific Northwest e-scrap processor has been acquired, and a company manager anticipates the new owners will expand its electronics recycling capabilities.
Simon Metals, a Washington state company with operations in Tacoma and Vancouver, was acquired by Metro Metals Northwest. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
In Vancouver, Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility acquired from IMS Electronics Recycling in late 2016. In addition, Simon Metals processed e-scrap, including circuit boards, at its sprawling Tacoma site.
Both sites are now part of Metro Metals, giving the industrial-based scrap metals company a solid footprint in the electronics recycling space. Based in Portland, Ore., Metro Metals has sites in Portland; Vancouver, Wash.; and Denver. After folding the two additional Simon Metals sites into its company, Metro Metals is now the largest privately held scrapyard west of the Mississippi River, according to a press release.
"Words can’t really describe the optimism and overall excitement of the acquisition," Paul Olsen, who was president of Simon Metals and is now Washington general manager for Metro Metals, told E-Scrap News. "Though Metro Metals wasn’t known for being an e-waste company, they are well known for their integrity and are very well respected in the metals recycling industry. This combination will undoubtedly grow the Vancouver e-waste division."
[caption id="attachment_12483" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
In Vancouver, Wash., Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility. The facility is now owned by Metro Metals Northwest. | Jared Paben/E-Scrap News[/caption]
A major Pacific Northwest e-scrap processor has been acquired, and a company manager anticipates the new owners will expand its electronics recycling capabilities.
Simon Metals, a Washington state company with operations in Tacoma and Vancouver, was acquired by Metro Metals Northwest. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
In Vancouver, Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility acquired from IMS Electronics Recycling in late 2016. In addition, Simon Metals processed e-scrap, including circuit boards, at its sprawling Tacoma site.
Both sites are now part of Metro Metals, giving the industrial-based scrap metals company a solid footprint in the electronics recycling space. Based in Portland, Ore., Metro Metals has sites in Portland; Vancouver, Wash.; and Denver. After folding the two additional Simon Metals sites into its company, Metro Metals is now the largest privately held scrapyard west of the Mississippi River, according to a press release.
"Words can’t really describe the optimism and overall excitement of the acquisition," Paul Olsen, who was president of Simon Metals and is now Washington general manager for Metro Metals, told E-Scrap News. "Though Metro Metals wasn’t known for being an e-waste company, they are well known for their integrity and are very well respected in the metals recycling industry. This combination will undoubtedly grow the Vancouver e-waste division."
In Vancouver, Wash., Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility. The facility is now owned by Metro Metals Northwest. | Jared Paben/E-Scrap News[/caption]
A major Pacific Northwest e-scrap processor has been acquired, and a company manager anticipates the new owners will expand its electronics recycling capabilities.
Simon Metals, a Washington state company with operations in Tacoma and Vancouver, was acquired by Metro Metals Northwest. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
In Vancouver, Simon Metals operated a 55,000-square-foot end-of-life electronics processing facility acquired from IMS Electronics Recycling in late 2016. In addition, Simon Metals processed e-scrap, including circuit boards, at its sprawling Tacoma site.
Both sites are now part of Metro Metals, giving the industrial-based scrap metals company a solid footprint in the electronics recycling space. Based in Portland, Ore., Metro Metals has sites in Portland; Vancouver, Wash.; and Denver. After folding the two additional Simon Metals sites into its company, Metro Metals is now the largest privately held scrapyard west of the Mississippi River, according to a press release.
"Words can’t really describe the optimism and overall excitement of the acquisition," Paul Olsen, who was president of Simon Metals and is now Washington general manager for Metro Metals, told E-Scrap News. "Though Metro Metals wasn’t known for being an e-waste company, they are well known for their integrity and are very well respected in the metals recycling industry. This combination will undoubtedly grow the Vancouver e-waste division."
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