Shredding operations have begun at evTerra's 103,000-square-foot Las Vegas facility. | Courtesy of evTerra[/caption]
E-scrap processor evTerra has activated its large-scale shredding and separation system in Nevada, a significant step in the company's nationwide expansion project.
The Forest Park, Ga.-headquartered company brought its shredding system on-line in Henderson, Nev. last week, said Jeff Gloyd, president of evTerra. The 103,000-square-foot facility, which is in a brand new building near Las Vegas, is the company's first processing facility outside of its Atlanta-area headquarters location.
A processor focused on low- and mid-grade end-of-life electronics, evTerra is owned by Igneo Technologies, which is building a secondary smelter for e-scrap and other metals-bearing streams in Savannah, Ga. Igneo Technologies, which has long run a similar secondary smelter in France, was acquired by metals mining and refining giant Korea Zinc in a $332 million deal last year.
Founded in 2021 with the goal of ensuring a steady supply of feedstock to the smelter, evTerra is planning to expand fast, first with the recycling facility in Henderson, followed by Elgin, Ill. (near Chicago) and San Antonio.
At the same time the company is working to bring the nearly identical processing facilities on-line in multiple cities, it is working toward dual e-Stewards and R2 certification for all of them, Gloyd said. That requires balancing "an incredible number of moving pieces."
"It's crazy but fun," he said.
[caption id="attachment_20184" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
Shredding operations have begun at evTerra's 103,000-square-foot Las Vegas facility. | Courtesy of evTerra[/caption]
E-scrap processor evTerra has activated its large-scale shredding and separation system in Nevada, a significant step in the company's nationwide expansion project.
The Forest Park, Ga.-headquartered company brought its shredding system on-line in Henderson, Nev. last week, said Jeff Gloyd, president of evTerra. The 103,000-square-foot facility, which is in a brand new building near Las Vegas, is the company's first processing facility outside of its Atlanta-area headquarters location.
A processor focused on low- and mid-grade end-of-life electronics, evTerra is owned by Igneo Technologies, which is building a secondary smelter for e-scrap and other metals-bearing streams in Savannah, Ga. Igneo Technologies, which has long run a similar secondary smelter in France, was acquired by metals mining and refining giant Korea Zinc in a $332 million deal last year.
Founded in 2021 with the goal of ensuring a steady supply of feedstock to the smelter, evTerra is planning to expand fast, first with the recycling facility in Henderson, followed by Elgin, Ill. (near Chicago) and San Antonio.
At the same time the company is working to bring the nearly identical processing facilities on-line in multiple cities, it is working toward dual e-Stewards and R2 certification for all of them, Gloyd said. That requires balancing "an incredible number of moving pieces."
"It's crazy but fun," he said.
Shredding operations have begun at evTerra's 103,000-square-foot Las Vegas facility. | Courtesy of evTerra[/caption]
E-scrap processor evTerra has activated its large-scale shredding and separation system in Nevada, a significant step in the company's nationwide expansion project.
The Forest Park, Ga.-headquartered company brought its shredding system on-line in Henderson, Nev. last week, said Jeff Gloyd, president of evTerra. The 103,000-square-foot facility, which is in a brand new building near Las Vegas, is the company's first processing facility outside of its Atlanta-area headquarters location.
A processor focused on low- and mid-grade end-of-life electronics, evTerra is owned by Igneo Technologies, which is building a secondary smelter for e-scrap and other metals-bearing streams in Savannah, Ga. Igneo Technologies, which has long run a similar secondary smelter in France, was acquired by metals mining and refining giant Korea Zinc in a $332 million deal last year.
Founded in 2021 with the goal of ensuring a steady supply of feedstock to the smelter, evTerra is planning to expand fast, first with the recycling facility in Henderson, followed by Elgin, Ill. (near Chicago) and San Antonio.
At the same time the company is working to bring the nearly identical processing facilities on-line in multiple cities, it is working toward dual e-Stewards and R2 certification for all of them, Gloyd said. That requires balancing "an incredible number of moving pieces."
"It's crazy but fun," he said.
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