Clean Harbors expands Gulf‑Midwest footprint with $130M DCI industrial and rail acquisition
- Clean Harbors is acquiring DCI’s Industrial and Rail Services for about $130 million, covering five sites, closing H1 2026.
- Clean Harbors reports roughly $6 billion revenue and will integrate the acquired operations to expand Gulf and Midwest presence.
- Clean Harbors expects operational synergies and stronger integrated waste, cleaning, and rail services for industrial customers.
Clean Harbors widens regional service footprint with DCI purchase
Clean Harbors is acquiring Depot Connect International’s Industrial Services and Rail Services business for about $130 million, a deal that covers five sites in Ohio, Louisiana and Texas and is expected to close in the first half of 2026 subject to customary conditions. The purchase brings assets into Clean Harbors’ North American environmental and industrial services network, which already includes hazardous-waste management, emergency spill response and industrial cleaning operations serving a broad industrial customer base.
Company statements and DCI commentary emphasize the strategic fit. DCI Chief Executive Chris Synek says the divestiture allows his company to sharpen focus on its core depot and transportation operations while enabling Clean Harbors to bolster regional capabilities for industrial clients. Clean Harbors reports roughly $6 billion in annual revenues and plans to integrate the acquired operations into its service platform to expand presence in the Gulf and Midwest corridors.
Operational continuity is a central plank of the transaction. Under the agreement DCI remains co‑located at major facilities in Baton Rouge and Pasadena, where it continues as the dedicated provider for tank‑trailer cleaning and maintenance, and both companies commit to an ongoing partnership across the DCI network for transportation services and wastewater treatment. Legal and financial advisers to the deal include Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP and Stifel, and both parties stress a seamless customer transition and preservation of jobs at the transferred locations.
Service consolidation and capital allocation
Clean Harbors expects the deal to deliver operational synergies and strengthen its offering to industrial customers that require integrated waste, cleaning and rail services; DCI uses proceeds to reinvest in its core depot network and specialized services. The transaction reflects broader consolidation trends in mission‑critical logistics and environmental services as companies seek scale and closer geographic coverage.
Analyst coverage remains divided
Analysts’ recent coverage of Clean Harbors shows a spectrum of views: nine professionals deliver mixed recommendations this quarter, reflecting differing assessments of revenue prospects, margin dynamics and cyclicality. Market watchers say continued attention to quarterly results, cash flow trends and regulatory developments will shape future analyst revisions.