Tech

This chemical-free process turns retired hard drives into reusable materials, reducing landfill waste and supporting domestic supply chains for critical rare earth elements

Share
Share


  • Chemical-free recycling supports U.S. supply chains and cuts landfill waste
  • Recovered materials support electric cars, wind power, and advanced electronics manufacturing
  • Sustainable end-of-life plan redefines future for storage in U.S. data centers

A new pilot program from Microsoft and Western Digital has demonstrated a novel method of recycling rare earth elements (REEs) from decommissioned hard disk drives.

The initiative, developed in collaboration with Critical Materials Recycling (CMR) and PedalPoint Recycling, successfully recovered nearly 90% of rare earth oxides and around 80% of the total feedstock mass from end-of-life drives and related components.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
EVs, tariffs in the spotlight as Chinese automakers take leading role at Shanghai auto show
Tech

EVs, tariffs in the spotlight as Chinese automakers take leading role at Shanghai auto show

A concept car is shown during the Volkswagen Group media night ahead...

Character.AI’s newest feature can bring a picture to uncanny life
Tech

Character.AI’s newest feature can bring a picture to uncanny life

Character.AI’s new AvatarFX tool can turn a single photo into a realistic...

Inside Disney’s high-tech mission to protect the Great Lizard Cuckoo at Lookout Cay
Tech

Inside Disney’s high-tech mission to protect the Great Lizard Cuckoo at Lookout Cay

When Disney Cruise Line opened its new island destination in the Bahamas...