IBM’s 2025 Breach Data Puts ITAD Providers Inside the Vendor-Risk Perimeter

The global average breach cost at $4.44 million, according to IBM. Healthcare leads all industries at $7.42 million, followed by financial services at $5.56 million, industrial at $5.00 million, energy at $4.83 million, and technology at $4.79 million. Supply-chain compromise, where ITAD sists, ranks as the second-costliest attack vector at $4.91 million per incident, trailing only malicious insider incidents at $4.92 million. Phishing averages $4.80 million and stolen credentials $4.67 million. For ITAD providers, the supply-chain figure is the number that matters. Enterprise procurement teams now treat disposition vendors as part of the same risk perimeter as any other third party with access to sensitive data. Governance maturity, documentation quality, and audit readiness are becoming primary evaluation criteria, alongside processing capacity and recovery rates. Providers serving healthcare and financial services face buyers with the highest breach-cost exposure and the strongest incentive to demand governance-mature partners.

The ITAD Sustainability Roadmap: 20 Strategic Actions for a Shifting ESG Environment

The ESG debate in the United States has entered a more politically charged phase. Various groups continue to challenge the role of ESG considerations in business decisions, but the central question is whether this backlash represents a meaningful weakening of enterprise demand for sustainability reporting and environmental performance measurement. This analysis examines what that shift means for ITAD providers and outlines twenty strategic actions companies should consider to remain competitive within enterprise accounts. A downloadable roadmap and client checklist accompanies the analysis for executives evaluating internal capabilities and prioritizing investment.

Seized e-Waste in SE Asia: Return to Sender

Thailand’s recent seizure of suspected illegal e waste at Laem Chabang Port is the latest in a wave of enforcement actions across Southeast Asia that is reshaping how the region handles foreign electronic scrap, and raising the prospect that exporters face a National Sword style closure of informal import channels.

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