Home » Services » Electronics Recycling Electronics Recycling
X-ray shredding and destruction is easy and secure with AccuShred

AccuShred: EPA Approved

Electronics Recycling

In response to the growing need for businesses to recycle computers and other obsolete electronics, AccuShred established our computer recycling program.

Because the security of information is the foundation of our business, AccuShred does not resell any intact computer equipment. All electronic equipment is completely demanufactured down to its core components and recycled in commodity form. AccuShred physically destroys all computer hard drives, and will provide you with a notarized Certificate of Destruction with individual serial numbers upon request.

In addition to helping you satisfy your requirements for environmental compliance reporting, AccuShred provides pickup and cleanout service for the recycling of end-of-life electronics, including:

  • Computers (desktops, towers and laptops)
  • Monitors
  • Mainframes and Servers
  • Terminals and Modems
  • Keyboards
  • Wires and cables
  • Printers
  • Copiers
  • Fax machines
  • Telephone equipment
  • Cell Phones
  • UPS Power Supplies

Electronics Recycling Facts

  • Dumping 315 million computers into landfills amounts to the introduction of 1.2 billion pounds of lead, 2 million pounds of cadmium, and 400,000 pounds of mercury into waste streams. The U.S. EPA estimates that currently 80% of all discarded computer systems find their way into landfills. By comparison, approximately 70% of household appliances (stoves, washers, dryers etc) are recycled.
  • Computers can contain an average of four pounds of lead (depending on their size, make and vintage) as well as other potential toxins like chromium, cadmium, mercury, beryllium, nickel, zinc and brominated flame retardants.
  • More than 3.2 million tons of electronic waste is deposited in landfills each year and that figure is expected to rise by 3 percent to 5 percent per year (almost three times faster than the municipal waste stream).
  • The average lifespan for a common PC manufactured in 1999 was 37 months. It's estimated that by 2005, most people will trade in their computers for new models within two years of purchasing them and one computer will become obsolete for every new computer put on the market.
  • It takes 3.7 pounds of fossil fuels and other chemicals and 70.5 pounds of water to produce a single 2-gram microchip.
  • An estimated 12.75 million computers went to recyclers in the U.S. in 2002.
  • In 1998, more than 112 million pounds of materials were recovered from electronics including steel, glass, plastic and precious metals.
Banking/Financial | Health Care | Pharmacy | Real Estate | Industrial | Engineering | Insurance | Legal | Government | Accounting | Consulting | Mortgage/Property | Gaming