Todd Koleski and Jennifer Ganka of Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services[/caption]
It's well-known the U.S. military is a huge buyer of goods, including electronic equipment. Officials recently shed light on how the Department of Defense approaches disposition.
During the 2018 fiscal year, the Department of Defense, though its Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) Disposition Services, sold 35 million pounds of scrap electronics, said Todd Koleski, a sales contracting officer at DLA Disposition Services, in an interview with E-Scrap News. The year before, 27 million pounds were sold.
DLA is the combat logistics support agency for the Pentagon. Based in Battle Creek, Mich., Disposition Services transfers or disposes of used military equipment, including electronics. E-scrap alone generates millions of dollars a year for the military.
Scrap electronics are sold via a term contract, which is awarded after a sealed bidding process, Koleski said. The current contract holder is Regency Technologies, a processor based in Twinsburg, Ohio with locations across the country (Regency president Jim Levine declined to comment to E-Scrap News about the contract with DLA Disposition Services).
Under the agreement, for e-scrap material generated east of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26 percent of the American Metal Market No. 1 copper and wire price, Koleski said. For material generated west of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26.5 percent. In fiscal year 2018, the average price it paid was 58 cents per pound. The year before, it was 55 cents per pound.
Over the years, DLA Disposition Services has shifted away from service contracts through which it pays to recycle material, moving instead toward sales contracts through which it sells scrap material, said Jennifer Ganka, a marketing specialist at DLA Disposition Services. She noted DLA Disposition Services, which sells a variety of different types of obsolete equipment and materials, is the only revenue-generating portion of the Department of Defense.
[caption id="attachment_10751" align="alignright" width="300"]
Todd Koleski and Jennifer Ganka of Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services[/caption]
It's well-known the U.S. military is a huge buyer of goods, including electronic equipment. Officials recently shed light on how the Department of Defense approaches disposition.
During the 2018 fiscal year, the Department of Defense, though its Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) Disposition Services, sold 35 million pounds of scrap electronics, said Todd Koleski, a sales contracting officer at DLA Disposition Services, in an interview with E-Scrap News. The year before, 27 million pounds were sold.
DLA is the combat logistics support agency for the Pentagon. Based in Battle Creek, Mich., Disposition Services transfers or disposes of used military equipment, including electronics. E-scrap alone generates millions of dollars a year for the military.
Scrap electronics are sold via a term contract, which is awarded after a sealed bidding process, Koleski said. The current contract holder is Regency Technologies, a processor based in Twinsburg, Ohio with locations across the country (Regency president Jim Levine declined to comment to E-Scrap News about the contract with DLA Disposition Services).
Under the agreement, for e-scrap material generated east of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26 percent of the American Metal Market No. 1 copper and wire price, Koleski said. For material generated west of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26.5 percent. In fiscal year 2018, the average price it paid was 58 cents per pound. The year before, it was 55 cents per pound.
Over the years, DLA Disposition Services has shifted away from service contracts through which it pays to recycle material, moving instead toward sales contracts through which it sells scrap material, said Jennifer Ganka, a marketing specialist at DLA Disposition Services. She noted DLA Disposition Services, which sells a variety of different types of obsolete equipment and materials, is the only revenue-generating portion of the Department of Defense.
Todd Koleski and Jennifer Ganka of Defense Logistics Agency Disposition Services[/caption]
It's well-known the U.S. military is a huge buyer of goods, including electronic equipment. Officials recently shed light on how the Department of Defense approaches disposition.
During the 2018 fiscal year, the Department of Defense, though its Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) Disposition Services, sold 35 million pounds of scrap electronics, said Todd Koleski, a sales contracting officer at DLA Disposition Services, in an interview with E-Scrap News. The year before, 27 million pounds were sold.
DLA is the combat logistics support agency for the Pentagon. Based in Battle Creek, Mich., Disposition Services transfers or disposes of used military equipment, including electronics. E-scrap alone generates millions of dollars a year for the military.
Scrap electronics are sold via a term contract, which is awarded after a sealed bidding process, Koleski said. The current contract holder is Regency Technologies, a processor based in Twinsburg, Ohio with locations across the country (Regency president Jim Levine declined to comment to E-Scrap News about the contract with DLA Disposition Services).
Under the agreement, for e-scrap material generated east of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26 percent of the American Metal Market No. 1 copper and wire price, Koleski said. For material generated west of the Mississippi River, Regency pays 26.5 percent. In fiscal year 2018, the average price it paid was 58 cents per pound. The year before, it was 55 cents per pound.
Over the years, DLA Disposition Services has shifted away from service contracts through which it pays to recycle material, moving instead toward sales contracts through which it sells scrap material, said Jennifer Ganka, a marketing specialist at DLA Disposition Services. She noted DLA Disposition Services, which sells a variety of different types of obsolete equipment and materials, is the only revenue-generating portion of the Department of Defense.
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