An Organically Grown Company

Genesis Electronics Recycling was founded in 2009 in response to the growing demand for responsible electronics recycling. Over the past 13 years, the company has experienced explosive growth, beginning in a garage and expanding to a 65,000 sq. ft., state-of-the-art facility with a staff of 43 highly-trained personnel.

Since Genesis’s inception, the vision has been a zero-landfill policy. It was a true passion of the founders, and it drove all operational procedures, set KPIs, and shaped subsequent strategic and technical directions.

A significant milestone was the decision to obtain R2 (responsible recycling) Certification, ISO 14001, and ISO 18001, which we did in 2012 and have maintained ever since with annual third-party audits. We are also proud members of NAID (National Association for Information Destruction) and ISRI (Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries).

Today, Genesis Electronics Recycling serves more than 600 companies, representing major firms across a broad spectrum of industries. Last year alone we recycled more than 20 million pounds of e-waste, which was re-introduced back into the manufacturing stream instead of ending up in a landfill, saving energy and reducing pollution.

Genesis’s fully integrated e-waste and products recycling platform continues to grow as a standalone program, and holistically, with Genesis’s IT asset management and product disposition divisions.

We’ve built an advanced manufactured product and IT assets security division, working closely with our customers’ technology and security personnel to ensure 100% safety in technology-retirement processes. We ensure that no current or retired process, product, or technology can compromise a company’s success.

Genesis continues to expand its capabilities and the scope of its manufactured product lifecycle management division, which offers customized solutions in brand protection, market retrieval, end-of-life management, and value recovery.

Genesis Electronics Recycling truck
box of e-waste
computer recycling