For most of its existence, Sims Lifecycle Services (SLS) has been viewed as a secondary business alongside its parent company’s metals operations. That perception shifted somewhat with Sims’ latest half-year results, which pushed SLS to the foreground as a core growth engine and a bellwether for where the ITAD and secondary components markets are heading.
DDR4 scarcity defines a structural turning point
Behind the division’s breakout lies a supply disruption that is reshaping value in the data center decommissioning chain. DDR4 memory, still widely deployed across enterprise and legacy infrastructure, is now in structurally tight supply. Semiconductor manufacturers are prioritizing DDR5 to meet hyperscale AI demand, trimming effective DDR4 output and leaving a growing gap between installed DDR4 demand and new production.
Executives described this as an ongoing supply-demand imbalance, and not as a short-term spike. Rather than a classic commodities downturn, this is a shortage of usable DDR4 units. In that context, SLS’s decommissioning and test lines function as an extension of the DDR4 supply chain, recovering and retesting modules from retired racks so they can be redeployed with predictable performance.
SLS leaders also highlighted a new behavior among certain hyperscale clients: accelerating decommissioning schedules specifically to recover DDR4 modules for reuse in new or expanded deployments. That dynamic moves decommissioning away from a pure cost center and toward a strategic sourcing mechanism for constrained components.
Ireland marks a deliberate European expansion
SLS’s new 120,000-square-foot facility in Ireland, slated to come online soon, underscores how the company is positioning around hyperscale geography rather than generic regional coverage. Ireland is a well-established hub for European hyperscale data centers, hosting major capacity from multiple large cloud providers.
The new site is being developed to support existing hyperscale customer needs rather than speculative volume. Management pointed to significant annual throughput targets, with DDR4 recovery and repurposing expected to be a major part of the product mix. That approach contrasts with operators entering markets first and seeking anchor clients later; SLS is effectively following its customers’ footprint and locking in capacity around known demand.
Iron Mountain’s ALM business and SK Tes also have footprints in the broader European and Irish data center ecosystem, reinforcing that this is becoming a scale-driven contest for hyperscale-related ITAD work. SLS’s advantage, as presented, lies in converting established relationships into local operational capacity rather than competing purely on new business development.
Commercial model built on service integration
On the earnings call, analysts raised the question of whether hyperscalers, aware of rising resale margins on recovered components, might seek to bring decommissioning in-house or push for materially different commercial terms. Management’s response emphasized operational risk over headline margin. Hyperscalers are organized and capitalized to build and run live data center capacity, not to manage reverse logistics and component recovery at scale.
SLS contracts typically span three to five years and combine fixed-fee decommissioning with revenue-sharing on resale streams. When component prices rise, the upside is captured through the resale share, keeping incentives aligned and providing a mechanism to share the value of tight component markets. This structure also deepens dependency: Once clients are integrated into a combined service and resale model, switching providers is no longer a simple rate-card comparison.
Market implications for ITAD and secondary operators
The DDR4 situation is reshaping opportunity across the ITAD landscape. Persistent tightness in high-demand components is creating a multi-year tailwind for operators with the certifications, process control, and client access required to handle hyperscale-grade decommissioning and remarketing. Recent results from both Sims and Iron Mountain point to hyperscaler-driven decommissioning as one of the fastest-growing ITAD segments, particularly in data center-dense regions.
For mid-tier firms, the opportunity remains real but more constrained. Technically, DDR4 recovery and resale is accessible to any ITAD provider that can invest in appropriate test, grading, and remarketing capabilities.
Commercially, however, hyperscale-level contracts are increasingly awarded on the basis of service-level performance, security posture, and geographic proximity, not just yield and unit pricing. Ireland’s role as a European hyperscale nexus illustrates how physical location is becoming as important as the underlying processing capability.
The next competitive frontier
Sims’ leadership also signaled plans to deepen digital integration with hyperscaler operations, including new senior roles focused on aligning SLS systems more tightly with customer asset-lifecycle workflows. This means that leading ITAD providers will compete not only on how they process equipment after it leaves the rack, but on how early and deeply they are embedded into clients’ planning, inventory, and refresh decision cycles.
SLS may still be working toward its longer-term market share ambitions, but its latest disclosures suggest a shift from a quiet division within a metals-centric group to a more prominent ITAD platform in the AI era, built around decommissioning execution, component recovery capability, and closer integration with customers’ digital asset-lifecycle systems.























