Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification scorecard for the week of March 9, 2026

    Diversion Dynamics: Secondhand exports slow down fast fashion

    Certification scorecard for the week of March 2, 2026

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry Announcements for March 2026

    HP receives ocean plastics certification

    HP Inc. earnings point to memory inflation challenge

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 23, 2026

    Umicore highlights strength in recycling, catalysis

    Apto, Tusaar partner on rare earths recovery

    Apto, Tusaar partner on rare earths recovery

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 16, 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion

    Certification scorecard for the week of March 9, 2026

    Diversion Dynamics: Secondhand exports slow down fast fashion

    Certification scorecard for the week of March 2, 2026

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry Announcements for March 2026

    HP receives ocean plastics certification

    HP Inc. earnings point to memory inflation challenge

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 23, 2026

    Umicore highlights strength in recycling, catalysis

    Apto, Tusaar partner on rare earths recovery

    Apto, Tusaar partner on rare earths recovery

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 16, 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home Recycling

AMP rebrands with a focus on supplying entire facilities

Colin StaubbyColin Staub
February 13, 2024
in Recycling
An AMP One fully automated AI sorting system operating at the company’s Cleveland, Ohio secondary sortation facility. | Courtesy of AMP

After 10 years helping materials recovery facilities retrofit with innovative robotics equipment, AMP Robotics has dropped the latter part of its name, reflecting an emerging focus on building recycling centers from scratch with AI-equipped sorting systems.

Based in Louisville, Colorado, AMP has expanded over the past decade from its roots as a fledgling tech startup piloting equipment in a local MRF to a major equipment supplier with units in facilities throughout North America. The company’s artificial intelligence (AI) and robotic sorting equipment is capable of processing all manner of municipal recyclables – including most plastic resins, fiber grades and metals – as well as e-scrap and even municipal solid waste (MSW).

As the company has neared the 10-year mark in the business of developing and supplying recycling industry equipment, it has begun a new focus on supplying facilities with a complete sorting system. It’s an evolution from installing one or two units on a sorting line, and it drove the company to remove “Robotics” from its name. A new website, AMPSortation.com, also reflects the focus on delivering full sortation systems.

“The story of the company has been this continual expansion of scope of AI in the industry and what’s possible,” said Matanya Horowitz, founder and CEO of AMP, in an interview. “But the transition to system levels, we think, is a bit of a seminal moment for the company.” 

The rebrand comes shortly after a round of layoffs at AMP late last year. Horowitz said the job cuts were unfortunate and were a response to broad macroeconomic trends that the company has to plan for, which guide its forecasts on purchasing and fundraising patterns. He noted the layoffs weren’t directly connected to the rebrand.

Entering new industry sectors

AMP began in late 2013 as a small operation, consisting of a workbench in Horowitz’s garage. “It was me buying stuff from Home Depot, smashing it up and putting it beneath the camera,” he recalls.

It steadily expanded from there, aided by multiple rounds of grant funding that enabled a small team of a half-dozen employees and a slightly larger workshop. By 2016, the company launched a pilot project installing one of its early robotic arms at a Denver-area MRF, Alpine Waste & Recycling. The project focused on carton recovery, with the AMP Cortex robotic arm plucking cartons off a sorting line and AMP learning about how to fine-tune the process.

“As I saw it, the first and most obvious opportunity was to help the industry with this problem of manual sorting in MRFs,” Horowitz said. 

In the years that followed, AMP’s units were installed in numerous MRFs across North America, not only improving sortation but also enabling facilities to collect new data and analyze changes in the inbound stream.

By 2021, AMP itself entered the sortation sector, starting up multiple secondary-sortation facilities around the country. These centers began bringing in bales of mixed plastics and residual materials from MRFs and other suppliers, sorting them using the company’s AI and growing suite of sorting equipment, and producing plastics and fiber grades for sale into end markets. 

Integrating AI from the onset

Also in the last few years, the company began to follow two emerging tracks that have led to the rebrand: First, AMP leaders began to explore the possibility of building MRFs from the ground up, with artificial intelligence incorporated from the very beginning at the design phase; and second, AMP continued expanding the types of sorting equipment it produces.

Beyond the company’s robotic arms, it has branched out into its own version of optical sorters (the Jet and MicroJet), which use visioning technology combined with AI to identify, and dozens of air nozzles to direct, recyclables on the sort line. AMP also produces a belt-mounted vacuum sortation system targeted for removing thin plastic film from sort lines.

The interest in supplying entire facilities, mixed with the expanded equipment offering, led to AMP One, which the company bills as “the first zero-manual-sortation MRF.” It’s a modular facility capable of achieving anywhere from 15,000 to 100,000 tons per year of throughput, using entirely automated equipment. The system “autonomously transforms single-stream, municipal solid waste, MRF residue, mixed plastics and other infeeds into valuable bales,” the company states on its website. AMP says its MRFs can be ready in less than nine months from order date.

“Building AI in at the facility level really is a transformative step,” Horowitz said, adding that it opened up new conversations with customers: “We were talking to folks in a really different way than we were talking to them about just one or two robots in a MRF.”

The idea of entirely automated, tailor-scaled, AI-driven MRFs also opens new doors: For example, it might make a rural MRF feasible where it was previously too expensive or logistically challenging, Horowitz said. 

Because the company was having different conversations, and talking with a wider range of customers beyond MRF operators doing retrofits, AMP officially rebranded on Feb. 1. Horowitz expanded on the name change in a post on AMP’s website.

For his part, Horowitz says the shift to supplying sorting systems on a facility level is fulfilling an early vision he had for AMP.

“This is kind of what I really wanted to be doing when I started the company 10 years ago,” he said. “Really move the economics of recycling, so that recycling access can be expanded, so that places where recycling centers didn’t make sense before, now make sense. It’s kind of like, ‘We’ve got all the tools we needed. We’re starting to make the sort of change we were hoping for.'”

A version of this story appeared in Plastics Recycling Update on Feb. 7.

TweetShare
Colin Staub

Colin Staub

Colin Staub was a reporter and associate editor at Resource Recycling until August 2025.

Related Posts

How rising fuel and memory prices are impacting ITAD’s margins

How rising fuel and memory prices are impacting ITAD’s margins

byDavid Daoud
March 10, 2026

Current war in Iran is resulting in a noticeable change in cost pressures and risk considerations in electronics and IT...

ERI sues Revivn alleging raid on staff and trade secrets

ERI sues Revivn alleging raid on staff and trade secrets

byScott Snowden
March 10, 2026

ERI has filed a lawsuit against Revivn in New York Supreme Court alleging trade secret theft and a coordinated effort...

Certification scorecard for the week of March 9, 2026

byEditorial Staff
March 10, 2026

The following facilities have achieved, renewed or otherwise regained certifications.

Machinex debuts organics co-collection system

Coastal partners with Machinex on four Florida MRF projects

byStefanie Valentic
March 10, 2026

Coastal Waste & Recycling is accelerating its MRF upgrade strategy as it partners with Machinex on four projects.

AI servers reshape ITAD sector, recyclers brace for new wave

byScott Snowden
March 9, 2026

The coming retirement of AI data center hardware could reshape IT asset recovery, as recyclers prepare for complex servers packed...

Trade flow shifts, volatility require varied responses

Trade flow shifts, volatility require varied responses

byAntoinette Smith
March 9, 2026

Both long- and short-term solutions including policy, localization can help support the industry, panelists said during the 2026 Plastics Recycling...

Load More
Next Post

Textile recycling is at a pivotal moment, experts say

More Posts

Chinese processing group details goals for US visit

AMP lays out vision of next-generation, AI-driven MRFs

July 24, 2024

Rising containerboard demand comes as OCC prices taper

November 5, 2024
Northeast recycled commodity values hit 5-year lows

Northeast recycled commodity values hit 5-year lows

March 6, 2026

Mint, HP close loop on recycled copper

March 3, 2026
Emerging US EPR programs spark harmonization talks

Washington designates CAA to lead EPR implementation

March 4, 2026

Diversion Dynamics: Secondhand exports slow down fast fashion

March 5, 2026

Paper giants foresee continuing rise in OCC prices

August 28, 2023
EPR rules take shape in Oregon, as first test

Oregon passes battery EPR Law, banning lithium-ion disposal

March 6, 2026
RecycleDat! collects nearly 197,000 cans at Mardi Gras

RecycleDat! collects nearly 197,000 cans at Mardi Gras

March 9, 2026
Fireside Chat at PRC features CAA chief

Fireside Chat at PRC features CAA chief

March 4, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.