Telcos happen to be sitting on a gold mine of buried copper wire

Alfonso Maruccia

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Staff
A hot potato: Recycling previously used materials is becoming a significant business opportunity for tech companies and telecom providers. Copper installed in landlines may be worth billions, although removing the wires from the ground isn't easy.

British circular economy company TXO recently provided an enticing estimate of the potential value of copper wires owned by telecom companies if properly recycled and reused. Over the next 10 years, TXO stated, telcos could "harvest" 800,000 metric tons of copper wires. At today's prices, this material could be worth more than $7 billion, and its value continues to increase.

More than a dozen companies are now exploring how to extract this metallic treasure from old, increasingly obsolete telephone networks to resell the recycled cables on the open market. TXO highlights that copper wires aren't as essential as they once were, as fiber optics technology, which offers significantly better reliability and data transfer capabilities, is replacing the old metal.

Recycling old materials to build new devices is becoming a paramount concept in the technology industry, and copper is extremely valuable for today's applications, including solar panels and batteries. According to a 2022 report from S&P Global, demand for copper could double by 2035, increasing from 25 million metric tons to 50 million.

The copper industry is likely to struggle to keep up with growing demand, driving prices to unprecedented levels. Currently, copper is already 50 percent more expensive compared to the Covid-19 years, making recycling operations an increasingly valuable business opportunity.

However, retrieving the copper used in the telecom industry isn't as simple as unearthing the cables. The wires may have degraded after being underground for decades, and repackaging the material into marketable conditions will likely be an expensive and time-consuming process.

Despite these challenges, copper recycling could still be worth the effort. TXO claims that recycling operations could yield a 30 percent profit at today's copper prices, and large telecom companies like AT&T are already crunching the numbers.

Between 2021 and 2023, the US telecom giant recycled around 14,000 tons of copper wires, valued at an estimated $86 million to $120 million. Copper is now worth about $10,000 per metric ton.

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Something were seeing in the commercial sector is buildings being wired with really beefy aluminum wire instead of copper unless absolutely necessary. It is my understanding that alot of these beefy industrial copper wires are hard to recycle because they have asbestos in the insulation so many people just leave it in the ground rather than pay to have it recycled properly. That, or some of the guys take it home and burn the insulation off themselves in a fire pit.
 
Something were seeing in the commercial sector is buildings being wired with really beefy aluminum wire instead of copper unless absolutely necessary. It is my understanding that alot of these beefy industrial copper wires are hard to recycle because they have asbestos in the insulation so many people just leave it in the ground rather than pay to have it recycled properly. That, or some of the guys take it home and burn the insulation off themselves in a fire pit.
I was once involved with a construction project on a property that had previously been home to a prison. All duct banks electric and telecom, along with large vaults in between remained intact. All of the wiring, as you can imagine, was old school large gauge copper. There was literally miles of these cables and they had to go. The cables were more valuable if left intact, because the sheathing when removed revealed pristine copper. If you burned it off it would only reduce the price per pound. Those cables were so heavy, it blew my mind how many thousands of dollars they fetched. With that said, no company will dig those old cables up for scrap because the risk of damaging other utilities as well as cleanup restablishment of vegetation following the digging would outway any money from scrap.
 
If the copper thieves knew most "telephone" copper lines were abandoned, they'd be digging them up considering how many AC unit copper, homes and what not have been stolen.
I know one of the AT&T guys was in our office a couple years ago and I mentioned to him that one of the major trunk lines that use to have a liquid nitrogen bottle at a junction that they used to freeze out water was gone and he said yeah, they finally found the break & fixed it. He said that trunk line was abandoned save for one or two old style alarm system which were being forced to phase out.
With everyone using cellular or VoIP type phones, most of the copper, save for a lot of rural areas, is just sitting there.
 
Why destroy redundancy? Seems pretty silly to remove copper cable when it's able to still be used if required in an emergency.
 
What about cable insulation, rubber or plastic, it would need to be removed from cables first. If they melt the cable, it could be harmful for the environment.
 
What about cable insulation, rubber or plastic, it would need to be removed from cables first. If they melt the cable, it could be harmful for the environment.
There are mechanical wire strippers for that purpose. Recycling copper wires has been going on for some time.
 
It is my understanding that alot of these beefy industrial copper wires are hard to recycle because they have asbestos in the insulation so many people just leave it in the ground
Long-haul copper telco cabling doesn't use asbestos sheathing. The danger underground is water -- and the occasional mole or other burying animal -- not fire.

Why destroy redundancy? Seems pretty silly to remove copper cable when it's able to still be used if required in an emergency.
Essentially all this cable is 'dark': entirely unused.
 
Why destroy redundancy? Seems pretty silly to remove copper cable when it's able to still be used if required in an emergency.

When would it be used? Telcos are switching over to fiber and they won't have the equipment in place to use wire. Even if it was a Telco swapping copper for copper, they normally only do that when the existing wire is failing or woefully inadequate. It's just going to lay there and rot.
 
Centurylink is dragging their heels here, I'm on a 40mbps DSL line as we speak, they are still giving their copper here a full workout. They are the last RBOC (Regional Bell Operating Company -- CenturyLink was US West) and operate like one, they have DSL equipment they put in in the late 1990s in some parts of town and they're going to try to get that 30-40 years use out of it.
 
I remember years ago, construction companies were experiencing massive thefts of copper wire from job sites, even though it was stored in locked cargo containers...

Not long after this fact was publicized in the local newspapers (remember those ?), I started seeing those same cargo containers being suspended way up in the air using the large cranes that were used for lifting materials up to the upper floors of buildings & apartment complexes that were under construction.....

I also recall a friend of mine who had purchased several condos in a tax-lien sale to fix up & rent or resale years ago....

He did some work on them to get them ready for rental, but shortly after renting the first 2 units, he was receiving calls from the tenants complaining of no water coming out of the faucets, showers etc...

After trying all the normal, above-ground fixes, the plumbers snaked themselves into the crawl spaces under the buildings and guess what they discovered: all of the copper water pipes had been cut out from under the units...

Go figure :D
 
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