Synopsis
E-waste recycler Attero anticipates a first-rate 100 percent income surge, reaching roughly Rs 2,000 crore this fiscal year. This impressive enhance stems from enhanced automation, streamlined logistics, and increased operational scale. The firm is rising its recycling capability with recent amenities all over India.
Listen to this article in summarized structure
ETTelecomAttero
Fresh Delhi: E-waste and serious mineral recycler Attero expects to shut the latest fiscal with 100 per cent year-on-year enhance in income to round Rs 2,000 crore, a top firm official talked about on Monday.
The growth has been driven by margin enhancements resulting from a combination of automation, logistics efficiencies, and scale, Attero co-founder and CEO Nitin Gupta told PTI.
“We continue to look at 100 per cent growth year-on-year — profitable growth, cash-flow-positive growth — and our profit margins are increasing year-on-year. For FY26, we are already operating at an annualised run rate of Rs 2,000 crore. This margin expansion is the result of deep automation across plants, lower logistics costs and the benefits of operating at scale,” he talked about.
The firm had posted income of round Rs 1,000 crore in FY25.
Attero has a recycling facility in Roorkee that manages 1.44 lakh tonnes each and every year. It is miles in the approach of commissioning recent vegetation, which the firm claims will rob overall processing capability all over e-waste and metals recovery to 2.44 lakh tonnes each and every year.
The firm, in December, launched an investment of round Rs 150 crore to magnify its nationwide recycling and R&D network thru 5 key amenities. These consist of recent e-waste recycling vegetation in Pune, Bengaluru and Faridabad, a copper recycling plant in Reengus (Rajasthan), and a reinforced R&D Centre of Excellence in Elevated Noida.
Gupta talked about the three recent e-waste vegetation private a capability of 25,000 tonnes each and every year each and every, in conjunction with 75,000 tonnes of recent e-waste processing capability.
The copper recycling unit in Reengus provides another 25,000 tonnes, bringing total planned capability additions to 1,00,000 tonnes each and every year, he added.
“As India consumes more electronics and batteries, the country needs recycling facilities that can handle large volumes while maintaining consistent quality. The plants we are building reflect this need. They will use robotic dismantling lines, automated battery cutters and advanced sorting systems that raise efficiency and reduce the loss of valuable materials,” Gupta talked about.




