Shares in the company
AI-powered waste sorting robotics
Open for applications
AI-powered waste sorting robotics
21-100 employees
Open for applications
Shares in the company
21-100 employees
To deliver intelligent sorting technology and research to reinvent the economics of recycling.
Jump to section
To deliver intelligent sorting technology and research to reinvent the economics of recycling.
156% employee growth in 12 months
All materials have potential value for recycling or re-use if properly collected, aggregated, and processed. Recycleye is set to revolutionise recycling and accelerate the transition towards a circular economy, with its neural network providing a system that can identify and classify recyclable materials leading to more efficient sorting.
Recycleye has significant partnerships in place. As well as conducting paid pilots with the waste industry, it has partnered with Imperial College as well as Microsoft and Netherland’s Delft University to develop AI & machine learning. This ensures Recycleye has the newest capabilities and systems within its pipeline, keeping it at the forefront of development.
The global market for waste sorting is headed towards being worth more than $2 trillion a year, with the need for transparent and low cost solutions only expected to grow. Recycleye's system is affordable, data driven, and reduces the need for manual sorting, all contributing to the positive attention it has accrued. On top of this, significant funding has been raised by the company than will help scale operations and further improve its system's sorting accuracy.
Freddie
Company Specialist at Welcome to the Jungle
Feb 2023
$17m
SERIES A
Dec 2021
$0.5m
GRANT
This company has top investors
Victor Dewulf
(CEO)Completed a PhD in Environmental Engineering and Computer Vision and previously worked as an analyst at Goldman Sachs.
Peter Hedley
(CTO)Completed a master's in Computer Science at Imperial College and has worked as a data scientist prior to founding Recycleye.
Other Engineering
Sales & Account Management