Veolia, a leader in hazardous waste treatment, announced actions to expand its hazardous waste treatment and disposal business in North America through investment, acquisitions and capacity expansion. The company has acquired three new U.S. companies in Massachusetts and California and reaffirmed plans to expand existing facilities.
As reshoring drives the growth of U.S. manufacturing industries and medical technologies continue to advance, hazardous waste treatment and disposal capacity must anticipate this demand. Veolia’s global leadership in hazardous waste management allows the company to meet these needs, ensure environmental security for communities, and provide safe, proven solutions for industrial hazardous waste.
In Massachusetts, the company has acquired New England Disposal Technologies and New England MedWaste. With these acquisitions, Veolia now operates the state’s only permitted medical waste disposal facility, as well as two of the state’s three permitted household hazardous waste disposal sites. The acquisitions also expand Veolia’s leadership in serving the Massachusetts healthcare and life science industries.
In California, the company has acquired Ingenium, a waste management service firm specializing in packaging, transportation, recycling and disposal of hazardous, non-hazardous, biological, universal and radioactive waste. This builds on a prior strategic partnership between the two companies to lock in guaranteed high-temperature treatment capacity for customers at Veolia incinerators.
A vast and powerful network of infrastructure in the U.S., including a state-of-the-art thermal treatment facility to start up in Arkansas.
Veolia, which owns six, high-temperature incinerators at three sites in the U.S. (Port Arthur, Texas – Gum Springs, Arkansas and Sauget, Illinois) also gave an update on the expansion of its unique high temperature hazardous waste treatment facility in Gum Springs, Arkansas, which has been undergoing a multi-year expansion that will make it one of the most technologically advanced and environmentally sustainable facilities of its kind in the world. When the facility starts up it will progressively bring new permitted incineration capacity to the market, much of it already contracted as part of long-term agreements.
The new incinerator design incorporates energy recovery to produce power for the site and therefore is subject to the EPA’s recycling designation of H050 for wastes received for treatment. This designation, coupled with the multiple environmental awards already received by the project, further reinforces Veolia’s position as a provider of environmentally sustainable waste management solutions. This ability to turn waste into a resource and to design facilities that are both essential for the regions and increasingly virtuous, perfectly aligns with the ambitions set out in Veolia’s strategic GreenUp program, which aims to depollute, decarbonize, and preserve resources.
Published July 2025