IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) Recycling, Resale Value, and Disposal (2026)
Last updated: 30 April 2026
IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa): recycling, resale, and end-of-life options
Reviewed by the eCycling Central editorial team on April 2026
The IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) (IceRiver, released 2023) is a SHA-256 ASIC weighing 14.3 kg, with a hashrate of 21 TH/s at 142 J/TH energy efficiency. This guide covers what to do with one at end of life: resale, scrap recovery, hosting, or controlled disposal.
Current resale market
Status: Kaspa flagship. Asset value heavily tied to KAS price.
Typical secondary-market resale: $1400-2400 USD. Original release price was $9000.
Active marketplaces for resale:
- Compass Mining - hosted-mining marketplace, accepts hardware trade-ins
- Kaboomracks - Telegram-based bulk-rig broker
- SunnySide Digital - secondary-market reseller
- [Direct manufacturer trade-in] - Bitmain, MicroBT, Canaan all run periodic buyback programmes
Scrap recovery value
If the unit is end-of-life, scrap recovery is the only legal path in most jurisdictions. Approximate recoverable materials per 14.3 kg unit:
- Aluminium chassis and heatsinks: ~70% of weight (10.0 kg) - LME spot ~$2.40/kg = ~$24
- Copper wiring and bus bars: ~5% of weight (0.72 kg) - LME spot ~$9.50/kg = ~$7
- PCB with gold connectors and tantalum capacitors: mixed-grade scrap, ~$8-25 per unit at integrated smelter
- Steel frame and fasteners: small amount
Total scrap recovery value: typically $15-50 per ASIC at modern integrated smelters (Aurubis, Umicore). Value is a fraction of any working resale price - sell working units before scrapping.
Hosting alternative
If your power cost is above $0.06/kWh and the unit is uneconomic at that price, hosting in a low-cost region (Texas, Paraguay, Ethiopia, Iceland) may extend earning life by 6-18 months. Hosting providers typically charge $0.06-$0.09/kWh fully landed. Check the J/TH efficiency against current Bitcoin difficulty before signing a hosting contract.
Legal disposal routes
ASICs are classified as WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) under EU Directive 2012/19/EU and most national equivalents. Disposal must go through a registered WEEE processor in:
- EU and UK: WEEE-registered ATF (Authorised Treatment Facility)
- US: R2 or e-Stewards certified electronics recycler
- Canada: provincial-EPR registered facility
- Australia: NTCRS registered processor
Cannot legally be placed in regular waste in any of the above jurisdictions.
Bitcoin e-waste data context
Per Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance research (2021, updated through 2024), the Bitcoin network generates an estimated 30.7 kt of e-waste per year from ASIC obsolescence. The IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) contributes to this where it is scrapped rather than refurbished or hosted in a lower-cost region.
Sources
- IceRiver product specifications
- Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance: Bitcoin Mining Resource Centre
- LME copper, aluminium spot prices
- EU WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU
- Compass Mining secondary-market price tracker
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) worth on the secondary market?
Typical secondary-market resale is $1400-2400 USD as of April 2026. Original release price was $9000. Active marketplaces include Compass Mining, Kaboomracks, and SunnySide Digital.
Is the IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) still profitable to mine with?
Kaspa flagship. Asset value heavily tied to KAS price.
How much scrap value does a IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) have?
Approximately $15-50 per unit in recoverable aluminium (10.0 kg), copper (0.72 kg), and PCB precious metals. Working resale value is always higher than scrap, so sell first if the unit still functions.
How do I legally dispose of a IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa)?
As WEEE-classified electronic equipment, the IceRiver KS5 (Kaspa) must go through a registered WEEE processor (EU/UK), R2/e-Stewards certified recycler (US), or country-equivalent facility. Cannot be placed in regular waste in any major jurisdiction.