Paladin EnviroTech has acquired Ireland-based ICT, adding on-site data destruction capability and expanding its European IT asset disposition footprint in a market shaped by data center demand.
ICT was founded in 2003 and was the first ITAD provider in Ireland to achieve R2v3 certification, according to the company and the SERI directory. The business offers IT asset remarketing, electronics recycling, data center decommissioning, secure logistics and both on-site and off-site data destruction.
Paladin Chief Operating Officer Bill Vazquez told E-Scrap News that the acquisition was driven in part by existing customer demand in Ireland and by ICT’s established mobile shredding operation.
“We have some clients that have material in Ireland with the data center, and so it was strategic from that standpoint,” he said. “The on-site shredding capability was also something we’re very interested in.”
Vazquez said ICT’s truck can shred hard disk drives and solid-state drives on-site, and said the company is currently able to process about 4,000 drives per day through those destruction services.
The acquisition also brings more of that work under Paladin’s direct control, rather than relying on subcontractors. That matters in a segment where chain of custody and certified destruction are central selling points.
“What I like about it is, we’re not having to use a subcontractor. We’re doing it ourselves,” Vazquez said. “Being a fully vertically integrated provider, I think that gives us some advantages.”
Paladin said ICT is expected to transition to the Paladin brand and relocate to a newly leased 52,000-square-foot processing facility in Dublin. Vazquez said the new site is near Dublin Airport and closer to major data center clusters, which should improve service and allow for higher volumes than ICT’s current facility can handle.
The move strengthens Paladin’s position in Europe after the company’s first deal in the region, the acquisition of R&L Recycling in Helmond, the Netherlands. That facility spans about 129,000 square feet and gave Paladin its first in-region European platform for ITAD, electronics recycling and materials recovery.
Paladin has also been expanding in the US. Its Laurel, Maryland, site, announced in February, was designed to extend secure collection and data destruction services in the Washington and Baltimore corridor, especially for customers that may be too small to attract traditional ITAD providers.
Vazquez said the Ireland operation also fits with the company’s push into rare earth recovery. Paladin and Critical Materials Recycling announced the REcapture joint venture in February, with a focus on recovering rare earth elements from electronics and industrial scrap.
“We’ll also be leveraging the shredded hard drives, capturing the rare earth magnet out of it,” Vazquez said.






















