Recycling Nationwide
Wind blade recycling is a growing industry. The Southwest has no infrastructure. Yet.
Wind blade recycling is a growing industry. The Southwest has no infrastructure. Yet.
Across the United States, a small but fast-growing network of companies is solving the wind blade disposal problem – processing thousands of blades annually and turning composite materials into everything from concrete filler to furniture. It’s a market that grew to $68 million in 2024 and is projected to reach $1.1 billion by 2032. And right now, there is not a single facility in New Mexico or the broader Southwest.
There are 11 wind blade recycling facilities operating or opening across the United States. None are in New Mexico. None are in the Southwest. The nearest option for New Mexico wind farms is hundreds of miles away in eastern Texas a distance that makes recycling less economical than landfilling for many operators. The EVSWA Facility would be the first of its kind in the Southwest United States.
Wind blade recycling market size in 2024
Projected market size by 2032
U.S. turbines currently reaching end-of-life
Distance to nearest recycling facility from NM wind farms
HOW WIND BLADES ARE RECYCLED
Mechanical grinding & cement co-processing
Most commercially mature
Blades are shredded into material used as filler or fuel in cement production. The glass fiber and resin substitutes both serve as raw materials and fuel in cement kilns. This is currently the most widely used commercial route and the primary method used by the largest U.S. operators.
Thermal processing (pyrolysis)
In use
Heat breaks down the composite materials to recover fiber. Fiber quality can degrade in the process, but the method is already in commercial use at several facilities and continues to improve.
Chemical recycling (solvolysis)
Emerging
Solvents break down the resin, recovering high-quality fibers for reuse in manufacturing. Still largely in development, but considered a promising route for recovering the most value from blade materials.
Creative reuse
Product manufacturing
Some operators convert blades into finished products – furniture, planters, construction panels, railroad ties, and shipping pallets. A smaller-volume, but high-visibility approach that demonstrates the material’s versatility beyond industrial applications.
WHO’S OPERATING NATIONALLY
The national recycling landscape is concentrated in the Midwest and South close to the country’s largest wind corridors in lowa, Texas, and Oklahoma. Here’s where facilities currently exist or are opening:
| Company | Location | Materials / Method | Scale |
|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Materials | Boone, IA | Magnets Recycling | — |
| REGEN Fiber | Fairfax, IA | Concrete, asphalt, composites | 3,000 blades/yr |
| REGEN Fiber | Des Moines, IA | Scrap processing | 30,000 tons/yr |
| Veolia North America | Louisiana, MO | Cement co-processing | 7,000+ blades processed to date |
| Veolia North America | Gum Springs, AR | Cement co-processing | Opening 2026 |
| Woodbridge Advanced Solutions | Woodward, OK | Glass & fiber reinforced polymer for concrete/asphalt | 140,000 sq ft on 56 acres |
| Carbon Rivers | Knoxville, TN | Glass fiber recovery | 1-20 tons/day of fiberglass waste |
| REGEN Fiber & Pitbull Shredding | Lubbock, TX | Sustainable fiber processing | 12 tons shredded/hour nearest to NM |
| Z&S Tech LLC | Houston, TX | Reinforced composites | — |
| Cimentaire / United Standard Materials | Denton, TX | Flash coatings & silicon carbide | — |
| Global Fiberglass Solutions | Sweetwater, TX | Glass and fiberglass | — |
| Canvus | Avon, OH | Furniture & planters | 1,500-2,000 blades/yr |
| Momentum of Western NY | Bath, NY | — | 28,000 sq ft |
The closest facility to New Mexico is in Texas: Global Fiberglass Solutions in Sweetwater (~250 miles east). For context, transporting a single 170-foot blade – roughly half the length of a football field over that distance adds significant cost, making landfilling the default choice for many operators. A facility at EVSWA would dramatically reduce that distance for New Mexico’s 29 wind farms, changing the economics of recycling versus disposal for the entire State.
THE MARKET OPPORTUNITY
Wind blade recycling is not a niche environmental cause it’s a fast-growing industrial market driven by hard economics. With 66,000 wind turbines in use nationally and 45,000 approaching end-of-life, the volume of material needing processing is enormous and accelerating. Early movers are establishing the infrastructure, the methods, and the market relationships that will define this industry for decades. The EVSWA facility – positioned at the center of New Mexico’s wind energy corridor is an opportunity to be part of that foundation, not play catch-up to it.
2024 market size
2032 projected market size
growth projected over 8 years