Responsive Image Banner

Recycling professionals descend on San Diego for ReMA show

The world’s major players in the metals recycling sector have descended on San Diego for the annual ReMA Convention and Expo.

The team from Okada at ReMA 2025 The team from Okada at ReMA 2025 in San Diego. (PHOTO: D&Ri/KHL Group)

The mood among both exhibitors and attendees can be described as relaxed and upbeat, with a quiet positivity for business stability and growth emerging—tempering the challenges of the current volatility in the market.

Where conversations at Bauma Munich, which took place just a few weeks ago in Germany, were dominated by the uncertainty created by President Trump’s barrage of tariff announcements, the discussions being had at ReMA have been more tempered and practical in nature.

The ‘wait and see’ stance that many adopted when news of the US tariffs broke has now shifted a gear into ‘we’ll figure it out as we go’.

Indeed, in speaking with equipment OEMs like Japanese attachments manufacturer Okada, D&Ri has learned that when quoting prices, many are telling their customers they will re-quote at the time of sale to make sure they can offer the best equipment deals.

And when it comes to the equipment on show, the exhibitors have not disappointed. The stands of industry giants featured—well—industry giants. Caterpillar, Liebherr, Sennebogen, Sierra, Hyundai, Link-Belt and Atlas all showed off their latest material handlers, which dominated the indoor exhibition hall.

Sierra's stand at ReMA 2025 Sierra was among several OEM's that impressed with their latest material handler models at ReMA. (PHOTO: D&Ri/KHL Group)

Large grapples, shears and tiltrotators from companies such as Okada, Shearcore, Genesis and OilQuick made up the majority of models on display, while robotic sorting technology and material processing, monitoring and management tech also made up a significant number of the stands attracting visitor attention.

While some exhibitors have expressed concern that the US-Canada trade war has resulted in fewer Canadian business professionals in attendance, the total number of visitors—which for the most part ranges from C&D waste recycling professionals, metals brokers and project financiers to asset recovery and battery recycling specialists from around the world—is expected to hit around 6,000, with over a third coming from outside North America.

Latest News
Less than a week to go: World Demolition Summit heads to Nashville
WDS brings global demolition and recycling experts together
Bauma to launch Saudi Arabia construction show in 2027
Bauma Saudi Arabia to debut in 2027, marking the show’s expansion into one of the world’s fastest-growing construction hubs
Hitachi Construction Machinery to become Landcros
The company will officially rebrand in April 2027, with the OEM saying the new name signals its evolution beyond machinery
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM
Lewis Tyler Editor Tel: +44(0) 7566 799988 E-mail: [email protected]
Peter Collinson International Sales Manager Tel: +44 (0) 1892 786220 E-mail: [email protected]
CONNECT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA
Demolition & Recycling International and Construction Briefing Newsletter

Your Industry Brief: Construction, Demolition & Recycling

Stay ahead with the latest industry insights, project updates and expert analysis — straight to your inbox.

It’s free, relevant and quick to sign up.

Sign me up