An Amazon worker at a reverse logistics hub holds a piece of data center equipment | Amazon[/caption]
Amazon's large-scale data center decommissioning facility coming to Pennsylvania will be a "huge part" of the company's sustainability drive, which focuses on reusing and remanufacturing as much as possible, a company representative said.
Amazon recently announced that it's working to build a 550,000-square-foot data center decommissioning/ITAD facility in Greencastle, Pa., a three-hour drive west of Philadelphia. The facility will be run by a newly created standalone company under the Amazon umbrella called re:Cycle Reverse Logistics.
"The company specializes in the handling of valuable electronic equipment like servers used in data centers," Lisa Anderson, spokesperson for re:Cycle Reverse Logistics, said in a statement to E-Scrap News. "Its services are designed to maximize the useful life of electronic equipment, develop more sustainable and efficient recycling practices, and handle electronics in an environmentally-sound manner."
Re:Cycle Reverse Logistics is an outgrowth - and large scaling up - of the existing reverse logistic operation that's a division of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the massive data center operator and cloud services provider, said another Amazon representative who preferred not to be named.
The representative said re:Cycle Reverse Logistics will initially focus on processing AWS data center equipment, not the company's office electronics. The representative suggested the company could take on clients outside of Amazon in the future.
[caption id="attachment_22951" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
An Amazon worker at a reverse logistics hub holds a piece of data center equipment | Amazon[/caption]
Amazon's large-scale data center decommissioning facility coming to Pennsylvania will be a "huge part" of the company's sustainability drive, which focuses on reusing and remanufacturing as much as possible, a company representative said.
Amazon recently announced that it's working to build a 550,000-square-foot data center decommissioning/ITAD facility in Greencastle, Pa., a three-hour drive west of Philadelphia. The facility will be run by a newly created standalone company under the Amazon umbrella called re:Cycle Reverse Logistics.
"The company specializes in the handling of valuable electronic equipment like servers used in data centers," Lisa Anderson, spokesperson for re:Cycle Reverse Logistics, said in a statement to E-Scrap News. "Its services are designed to maximize the useful life of electronic equipment, develop more sustainable and efficient recycling practices, and handle electronics in an environmentally-sound manner."
Re:Cycle Reverse Logistics is an outgrowth - and large scaling up - of the existing reverse logistic operation that's a division of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the massive data center operator and cloud services provider, said another Amazon representative who preferred not to be named.
The representative said re:Cycle Reverse Logistics will initially focus on processing AWS data center equipment, not the company's office electronics. The representative suggested the company could take on clients outside of Amazon in the future.
An Amazon worker at a reverse logistics hub holds a piece of data center equipment | Amazon[/caption]
Amazon's large-scale data center decommissioning facility coming to Pennsylvania will be a "huge part" of the company's sustainability drive, which focuses on reusing and remanufacturing as much as possible, a company representative said.
Amazon recently announced that it's working to build a 550,000-square-foot data center decommissioning/ITAD facility in Greencastle, Pa., a three-hour drive west of Philadelphia. The facility will be run by a newly created standalone company under the Amazon umbrella called re:Cycle Reverse Logistics.
"The company specializes in the handling of valuable electronic equipment like servers used in data centers," Lisa Anderson, spokesperson for re:Cycle Reverse Logistics, said in a statement to E-Scrap News. "Its services are designed to maximize the useful life of electronic equipment, develop more sustainable and efficient recycling practices, and handle electronics in an environmentally-sound manner."
Re:Cycle Reverse Logistics is an outgrowth - and large scaling up - of the existing reverse logistic operation that's a division of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the massive data center operator and cloud services provider, said another Amazon representative who preferred not to be named.
The representative said re:Cycle Reverse Logistics will initially focus on processing AWS data center equipment, not the company's office electronics. The representative suggested the company could take on clients outside of Amazon in the future.
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