Global E-Waste Surge Sparks New Avenues for IT Asset Recovery Leader Mender

The UN’s latest Global E-Waste Monitor warns that discarded electronics are piling up far faster than they are being responsibly recycled—highlighting a widening sustainability gap.

SEATTLE (Scrap Monster): Electronic waste is accelerating at an alarming pace, climbing by nearly two million metric tonnes every year and set to surpass 70 million tonnes by 2030, according to the American Chemical Society. The UN’s latest Global E-Waste Monitor warns that discarded electronics are piling up far faster than they are being responsibly recycled—highlighting a widening sustainability gap.

Turning this challenge into a business model, Kent Taggart, co-founder and CEO of US-based Mender, has built a thriving operation around secure IT asset disposal and technology reuse. Mender partners with large enterprises and government agencies that regularly cycle out ageing hardware. The company manages the retrieval of outdated devices, performs certified data sanitisation and determines whether each item can be refurbished or must be recycled.

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A substantial portion of incoming equipment is made of steel, particularly server racks from data centres. While the servers themselves are typically repurposed or harvested for components, the racks are often routed to metal recycling yards due to limited secondary-market demand.

Taggart sees growing opportunities to expand reuse channels, especially as hyperscale cloud providers such as AWS and Microsoft invest in circular-economy initiatives. Through a network spanning 37 countries, Mender aims to maximise the lifespan of IT assets while reducing emissions linked to long-haul waste transport.