Republic Services Inc (NYSE: RSG) Q3 2025 Earnings Call dated Oct. 30, 2025
Corporate Participants:
Aaron Evans — Investor Relations
Jon Vander Ark — President and Chief Executive Officer
Brian DelGhiaccio — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Tyler Brown — Analyst
Noah Kaye — Analyst
Sabahat Khan — Analyst
Bryan Burgmeier — Analyst
Kevin Chen — Analyst
Trevor Romeo — Analyst
Jasper Bibb — Analyst
Yehuda Silverman — Analyst
Rob Wertheimer — Analyst
David Manthey — Analyst
Stephanie Moore — Analyst
Shlomo Rosenbaum — Analyst
William Grippin — Analyst
Tony Bancroft — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good afternoon and welcome to the Republic Services Third Quarter 2025 Investor Conference Call. Republic Services is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RSG. All participants in today’s call will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Aaron Evans, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Thank you.
Aaron Evans — Investor Relations
Good afternoon. I would like to welcome everyone to Republic Services third quarter 2025 conference call. Jon Vander Ark, our CEO; and Brian DelGhiaccio, our CFO, are on the call today to discuss our performance. I would like to take a moment to remind everyone that some information we discuss on today’s call contains forward-looking statements, including forward-looking financial information, which involve risks and uncertainties and may be materially different from actual results. Our SEC filings discuss factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. The material that we discuss today is time sensitive.
If in the future, you listen to a rebroadcast or recording of this conference call, you should be sensitive to the date of the original call, which is October 30, 2025. Please note that this call is property of Republic Services, Inc. Any redistribution, retransmission or rebroadcast of this call in any form without the expressed written consent of Republic Services is strictly prohibited. Our SEC filings, our earnings press release, which includes GAAP reconciliation tables and a discussion of business activities, along with a recording of this call are available on the Republic’s website at republicservices.com. In addition, Republic’s management team routinely participates in investor conferences. When events are scheduled, the dates, times and presentations are posted on our investor website.
With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Jon.
Jon Vander Ark — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Aaron. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We delivered strong third quarter results, which highlight the consistency of our business model, disciplined operational execution and power of our portfolio. Even with persistent headwinds in construction and manufacturing end markets, we generated solid earnings growth and margin expansion. Continued investment in our differentiated capabilities positions us well to drive sustainable growth and enhance long-term shareholder value. During the quarter, we achieved revenue growth of 3.3%, generated adjusted EBITDA growth of 6.1%, expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by 80 basis points, delivered adjusted earnings per share of $1.90 and produced $2.19 billion of adjusted free cash flow on a year-to-date basis.
Our commitment to delivering world class service continues to support organic growth by reinforcing our position as a trusted partner for our 13 million customers. Our customer retention rate remained strong at 94%. We saw continued improvement in our net promoter score. This reflects our team’s commitment to delivering products and services that customers value. Organic revenue growth during the third quarter was driven by strong pricing across the business. Average yield on total revenue was 4% and average yield on related revenue was 4.9%.
Organic volume decreased total revenue by 30 basis points and related revenue by 40 basis points in the quarter. Volume performance included outsized C&D and special waste landfill activity. The increase in C&D tons related to hurricane recovery efforts in the Carolinas. Special waste activity was driven by an increase in event-based volumes across many of our disposal assets, primarily located in Sunbelt geographies. These volumes were offset by a decline in the collection business. The decrease in the — in collection volumes related to continued softness in construction and manufacturing end markets and shedding underperforming contracts in the residential business.
Organic revenue decline in the Environmental Solutions business created a 140 basis point headwind to total company revenue this quarter. Environmental Solutions performance was impacted by three primary factors: continued softness in manufacturing activity, lower event-driven volumes in our landfills, which includes E&P activity and fewer emergency response jobs. Given the relatively fixed cost structure of these assets and services, the impact on Environmental Solutions EBITDA and margin was more pronounced. While the Environmental Solutions business was down both sequentially and year-over-year, demand stabilized exiting the third quarter.
Our pipeline for new business is now expanding and we remain well positioned to capture growth opportunities as market conditions improve. Importantly, despite these headwinds in Environmental Solutions, we delivered over 6% growth in adjusted EBITDA and expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by 80 basis points at the enterprise level. These results reflect disciplined pricing about cost inflation, strong operational execution and effective cost management.
Moving on to sustainability. We are making progress on the development of our polymer centers and Blue Polymers joint-venture facilities. In July, we commenced commercial production at our Indianapolis Polymer center. This operation is co-located with a Blue Polymers production facility. We expect commercial production to begin at the Blue Polymers facility late in the fourth quarter. We are advancing renewable natural gas projects with our partners. One project came online during the third quarter. We have commenced operation at six RNG projects this year. We expect a total of seven RNG projects to commence operations in 2025. We continue to advance our commitment to fleet electrification. We had 137 collection vehicles in operation at the end of the third quarter. We expect to have more than 150 EVs in our fleet by the end of the year. We currently have 32 facilities with commercial scale EV charging infrastructure. This infrastructure investment will support continued growth of this differentiated service offering. As part of our approach to sustainability, we strive to be the employer where the best people want to work.
We continue to have high employee engagement scores and our turnover rate continues to trend lower compared to the prior year. With respect to capital allocation, we’ve invested more than $1 billion in strategic acquisitions on a year-to-date basis. Our acquisition pipeline remains supportive of continued activity in both the Recycling & Waste and Environmental Solutions businesses. Year-to-date, we have returned $1.13 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
I will now turn the call over to Brian, who will provide additional details on the quarter.
Brian DelGhiaccio — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Jon. Core price on total revenue was 5.9%. Core price on related revenue was 7.2%, which included open market pricing of 8.6% and restricted pricing of 4.8%. The components of core price on related revenue included small container of 9.2%, large container of 7.1% and residential of 6.8%. Average yield on total revenue was 4% and average yield on related revenue was 4.9%. Third quarter volume decreased total revenue by 30 basis points and decreased related revenue by 40 basis points. Volume results on related revenue included a 45% increase in landfill construction and demolition or C&D volume driven by $35 million of hurricane cleanup activity in the Carolinas and an 18% increase in landfill special waste revenue driven by volume growth across many of our disposal assets.
Year-to-date, we recorded approximately $100 million of event-driven revenue associated with hurricane and wildfire cleanups. We estimate these volumes will result in a full year adjusted EBITDA margin benefit of 30 basis points. Large container volumes declined 3.9%, primarily due to continued softness in construction related activity in most manufacturing end markets and residential volume declined 2.4% due to shedding underperforming contracts.
Moving on to recycling. Commodity prices were $126 per ton during the quarter. This compared to $177 per ton in the prior year. Recycling, processing and commodity sales decreased organic revenue growth by 20 basis points. Increased volumes at our polymer centers and reopening a recycling center on the West Coast, partially offset the impact of lower recycled commodity prices. Current commodity prices are approximately $120 per ton. Total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 80 basis points to 32.8%. Margin performance during the quarter included a 40 basis point increase from previously noted event-driven landfill volumes and margin expansion in the underlying business of 90 basis points. This was partially offset by a 20 basis point decrease from net fuel, a 20 basis point decrease from recycled commodity prices and a 10 basis point decrease from acquisitions.
Adjusted EBITDA margin in the Recycling & Waste business was 34.3%, which was up 150 basis points compared to the prior year. With respect to Environmental Solutions, third quarter revenue decreased $32 million compared to the prior year, driven by continued — by softness in manufacturing end markets, lower event activity and softer E&P volumes in the Gulf. Adjusted EBITDA margin in the Environmental Solutions business was 20.3%. Year-to-date adjusted free cash flow was $2.19 billion. Our strong performance reflects EBITDA growth in the business and the timing of capital expenditures. Year-to-date capital expenditures of $1.18 billion represents 62% of our projected full-year spend. Total debt was $13.4 billion and total liquidity was $2.7 billion. Our leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was approximately 2.5 times. With respect to taxes, our combined tax rate and impact from equity investments in renewable energy resulted in an equivalent tax impact of 21.2% during the quarter.
I will now hand the call back to Jon.
Jon Vander Ark — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Brian. Through the cycle, we believe our business can consistently deliver mid-single-digit revenue growth and grow EBITDA, EPS and free cash flow even faster. This generally produces 30 to 50 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion per year. This growth assumption is supported by pricing ahead of underlying costs, selling our comprehensive set of products and services and capitalizing on value-creating acquisition opportunities. We also expect financial contribution from investments made in sustainability innovation, including plastic circularity and our renewable natural gas projects.
Our initial perspective regarding 2026 as the long-term growth algorithm is intact. As a reminder, we reported approximately $100 million of revenue at an 80% incremental margin related to landfill volumes, except in 2025 that will not repeat in 2026. This should be reflected in year-over-year growth assumptions. We plan to provide full year 2026 guidance on our earnings call in February.
With that, we can now open the call to questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And today’s first question will come from Tyler Brown with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Tyler Brown
Hey, good afternoon, guys.
Jon Vander Ark
Hey, Tyler.
Tyler Brown
Hey, hey, Jon, I just want to make sure I have it big picture. I appreciate the color right there at the end of the prepared remarks. So the long-term algorithm, mid-single-digit revenue, hopefully EBITDA free cash grow faster than that. So when you think about as we go into ’26 and I think you kind of alluded to that, is that including the headwinds with the special of with the event-driven volumes? And then we also are going to have a fairly sizable commodity headwind if we snap the line today. So can you just talk a little bit about the puts and takes into ’26?
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, as you know, we’re not giving guidance for ’26, but I’ll give you some markers in the spirit of your question. Listen, the long-term growth algorithm of mid-single-digit growing EBITDA growth or EBITDA faster than revenue and free cash flow faster than EBITDA we think holds. We’re coming over tougher comp. So that probably just takes each of those down a click going into ’26. And that’s predicated on remaining pretty conservative on the macro, but also understanding what our pipeline is — looks like and how well performing we are in the fundamentals of the business. I think that shapes our perspective into 2026. And that certainly includes overcoming that commodity headwind as well.
Tyler Brown
Okay. Helpful. And then, Brian, just on the event-driven volumes, I just want to make sure I have it kind of by quarter. Was it something like $10 million of revenue in Q1 and then $55 million in Q2 and $35 million in Q3. Is that roughly right?
Brian DelGhiaccio
Yeah. So it’s roughly — it was $12 billion of revenue Q1, $53 million Q2, $36 million in Q3 total of $100 million.
Tyler Brown
Okay, perfect. And then just my last one. You guys have been very realistic around the volume environment. It does look like ES slowed down, it accelerated on the — to the downside. Just kind of what are you seeing out there in the market? Is that largely related to project work? And then if I look at the EBITDA flow through, I think it was almost a one-to-one revenue to EBITDA flow through. I know Hasways [Phonetic] landfills have very high flow through, was there something else driving that contribution margin?
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, I think it’s a confluence of events. Like the macro manufacturing continues to be very slow and we see that in the Recycling & Waste business too when large container hauls, again, we’re gaining share in that area, but volume is slowing down just because plant output is down in that space. So that’s part of it. We’re seeing delayed project-based work, a lot of reoccurring work like turnarounds or tank clean outs. People are just pushing those. And the good news is those come back, those don’t get delayed forever. And then good news for the macro society, bad news for us, it’s just been a very slow emergency response here across the board. Activity has just been pretty low across the board. So all of those things are feeding into it.
Brian DelGhiaccio
Yeah. And Tyler, to your question just on the margin, you’re right, it is falling through almost at the amount of the revenue decline. That is not just due to the revenue itself. There were some unique costs. We called out last year that we had a bad debt recovery about $4 million that was somewhat out of period. This year, we had a legal settlement, which added a couple of million dollars worth of costs. So that added $6 million spread between the two years, about 140 basis point impact on margin year-over-year.
Tyler Brown
Okay. Yes. No, that’s very helpful. Okay. Thank you, guys.
Jon Vander Ark
Thank you.
Operator
The next question will come from Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer and Company. Please go ahead.
Noah Kaye
Thanks for taking the questions. The open market pricing strength looked good again this quarter. Maybe just update us on how you see price cost spread heading into year end here and kind of the runway for ’26.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, positive. I mean, we’ll think about cost inflation kind of roughly in line with what you think about CPI, broadly speaking, there’s a few puts and takes underneath that, but at the aggregate, that’s fair. And then we’ll think about kind of a yield number that’s 75 to 100 basis points above that.
Noah Kaye
That’s a great place to model from. I guess switching gears there was one competitor this week that took an impairment charge related to a plastics facility. I know it’s different technology, but as you look at what’s happened with commodity pricing, how do you think about return expectations for the polymer centers?
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, we’re excited, listen, they — these projects typically have challenges on two ends. One is the supply end and obviously, we have an advantage because we get something off the ground 5 million times every day. And the other is on the demand end. And the demand end from both a pricing and a volume standpoint has been very strong and the spread between the input and the output on this side has been really consistent. In fairness, it’s taken us a little longer on the ramp-up of these projects to get to full capacity and full output. And that’s just the normal learning curve of new facilities starting up plants is challenging, but feel really good about our long-term assumptions there and excited to see Indy [Phonetic] come up the curve and Allentown open up next year.
Noah Kaye
Okay, excellent. Thank you. I’ll turn it over.
Operator
Your next question will come from Sabahat Khan with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Sabahat Khan
Great. Thanks and good afternoon. I guess just as you kind of think about 2026 and you called out acquisitions as one of the areas that generally contribute here, how is the pipeline looking relative to kind of this year, obviously a big year this year. Can you just talk about kind of the magnitude or how full that is and then mix across your different silos? Historically, you’ve talked about just keeping it more balanced, but just how is that looking right now? Thanks.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, pipeline looks very strong. We expect to finish the year strong and start out next year strong, the exact balance of when things close end of year or into the first half of next year, we’ll see. And then the pipeline behind that, things that would be more likely to close in the second half is still very full. And that will be a balance across both Recycling & Waste and ES tilted toward Recycling & Waste, but we’ll look for opportunities on all ends.
Sabahat Khan
Great. And then you provided some benchmarks around 2026. Is it really just going to be on the Environmental Services side, kind of the magnitude of the event-driven volumes that really swing how that segment performs? Or do you have any sort of visibility on how the next year could evolve relative to this year? Just some high-level perspective on what you’re seeing. Thanks.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, listen, we’ll forecast to grow that business next year, even in that what we — again, we’ll remain conservative on the macro and that continuing to be sluggish. The pipeline, again, Brian mentioned or mentioned in the prepared remarks that the pipeline is building. Listen most of our challenges here have been macro, but we always — we talked last quarter, we haven’t always got it quite right in terms of the price volume trade-off and we’ve taken a lot of price over the last three years in this business and we will continue to put upward pressure on price. That being said, for some of these opportunities, finding the market in the right balance, we’ve probably overshot that and the team is working hard and that’s why the pipeline is building to get that pricing right.
Sabahat Khan
Great. Thanks very much.
Jon Vander Ark
Thanks.
Operator
The next question will come from Bryan Burgmeier with Citi. Please go ahead.
Bryan Burgmeier
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. Yeah. I mean, just following-up on some of the questions on ES. Can you maybe give us a sense of your expectations for the fourth quarter for that business? Should we continue to expect kind of those mid-single-digit declines in the top line or just the pipeline that you’re mentioning for in buildings sort of start to come through. And then I guess on a sequential basis, margins kind of step down from 3Q to 4Q normally. I’m just not sure if that’s generally how you’re thinking about it.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, we think we’ve kind of found the bottom on this thing that we’re coming over — overcoming a pretty tough comp from the fourth quarter of last year. We had a major ER job that came in at pretty high incremental margin on that front. But I think about margin performance that kind of looks in the same zip code and then we build up from that in 2026.
Bryan Burgmeier
Got it. Thanks for that detail. And then just one follow-up is you mentioned you acquired a recycling facility in California during the quarter. I think that’s a little bit different than your polymer centers, maybe more of a reclaimer. I think that — does that kind of fit between your polymer centers and your [Indecipherable]? I’m just sort of curious what the incremental opportunity is there and is there more opportunities like that as Republic tries to build out their national kind of plastic cycling network, just overall thoughts on the M&A environment around plastics? Thanks. I’ll turn it over.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, that ended up being pretty opportunistic and unique. It’s connected to the West Coast Polymer Center and gets us plugged into the — really the bottling value chain there. Over time, we’ll look for more M&A in the space. I think in the very near term, you’re unlikely to see more opportunities there just because we’ll be focused on executing the polymer center and getting Indy fully up the curve, getting Allentown on pace and then the Blue Polymer JVs. And then over time, there’ll be an M&A opportunity. But I would think more about ’27 and beyond there versus ’26.
Operator
Your next question will come from Kevin Chen with CIBC. Please go ahead.
Kevin Chen
Hey, thanks for taking my question. Maybe just on some of the labor disruption you had in the second quarter, you — or maybe the first half of the year, you called out about $56 million in costs. Just wondering if there’s any residual impact as we think of Q4 into next year related to credits or any type of revenue adjustments you make as you kind of rebuild goodwill with some of these customers that face that disruption as we think of revenue trends in the next few quarters here?
Brian DelGhiaccio
Yeah, Kevin, we think we mostly captured the impact of that, including the revenue credits themselves. So we think at this point, the $56 million that we recorded in the third quarter will be it at this point. So yeah, we think we’re done.
Kevin Chen
Oh, perfect. Thanks for clarifying. And just on the EV targets, you provide us with the update every quarter here. It does feel like OEMs are deprioritizing the production of their electric — electrification strategy. Just I guess, how do you think that impacts these longer-term targets you have? It feels like you still feel pretty confident that you can get the vehicles you want despite maybe OEMs deprioritizing this propulsion system.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, no we feel really good about our partners in the space and customer demand for it. And we think it provides really unique benefits of a zero-emission vehicle and cities and communities are excited about it. At the same time, we’re going to do it in an economic fashion, right? This isn’t just a sustainability investment, this is also a business investment. And so we lost a little bit of incentive here in the federal legislation and that might slow our pace on the margin, but there’s other state and local incentives and there’s certainly customers who are willing to pay the most important part of the equation that will allow us to continue. So we’re going to continue to march it out in communities where it makes sense.
Kevin Chen
Perfect. Thank you for taking my questions.
Operator
Your next question will come from Trevor Romeo with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Trevor Romeo
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. I had one kind of follow-up on, I guess, the overall kind of manufacturing industrial volume activity as it relates to both Solid Waste and ES. Just kind of wondering, was the softness in this quarter kind of about what you’d expected last quarter when you lowered the guidance or you talked about demand stabilizing exiting the quarter. Maybe you could just walk us through kind of the monthly trends a little bit more or just any more color on that would be great.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah. Probably since our last call in the first couple of months after that, it was certainly more to the negative than our outlook was. And we’ve mentioned starting to stabilize and we think we found the bottom rebounding from here because there’s a ton of uncertainty out there for manufacturers and trade policy is top of the list. And I think you’re just seeing the rebound effect of those tariffs and people pre-building and pre-buying to get ahead of the tariffs. And then we’ve seen a slowdown in economic activity in a lot of sectors pretty dramatically in June, July, August and starting to see that pick back up. And so that’s really what we’re facing in both sides of the business.
Trevor Romeo
Got it. Thank you, John. And then I guess on capital allocation, the buyback ramped-up quite a bit in Q3. I think all the solid waste stocks have been trading kind of weaker since the quarter closed even. Should we think about buybacks continuing to be maybe a bigger driver with the stock at these levels or how are you thinking about that versus other uses of capital in the kind of near term?
Brian DelGhiaccio
Yeah. I would say we’ve always been opportunistic and we looked at it as a great opportunity to create value for our shareholders. So we were a buyer and I would expect us to be a buyer going forward.
Trevor Romeo
Okay. Thank you very much. Your next question will come from Tobey Sommer with Truist. Please go ahead.
Jasper Bibb
Hey, good afternoon, guys. It’s Jasper Bibb on for Toby. I just wanted to ask about expense inflation trends. Any early indication on what you’re anticipating for price cost spread in ’26? I noticed your labor COGS actually declined year-over-year this quarter, so maybe a favorable indicator there.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, as mentioned earlier, we think about pricing coming down relative but also costs coming down, but maintaining a price cost spread in the Recycling & Waste business of 75 to 100 basis points and have pretty good outlook and confidence of that going into 2026.
Jasper Bibb
Got it. And then maybe following up on ES, have you seen any retention impacts at your customers based on the pricing increases you’ve taken over the past couple of years?
Jon Vander Ark
There’s certainly been some churn, and we see that all the time in the Recycling & Waste business too as we’ve improved margin in that space. We’ve also seen the return of customers and that understanding that low price doesn’t always mean the best value that front. I’d say where we’ve gotten the price volume equation just slightly off is more of the event-based work that we’ve missed out on some opportunities. So it’s not pricing recurring revenue customers out, it’s event-based opportunities that we think we’re going to be able to be more competitive going forward.
Jasper Bibb
Got it. Thanks for clarifying that.
Operator
Your next question will come from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Yehuda Silverman
Hi. This is Yehuda Silverman on the line for Toni Kaplan. Just had a quick question about some of the cost uptick, specifically for fuel and landfill operating costs in the quarter. Just wondering if this was tied to anything specific or if it’s nothing really to focus too much on.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah. Look, if you’re looking just at a year-over-year basis, yes, some of that again, it’s a combination of both you’ve got price, but you also have volume due to acquisitions. So I would say neither of which are going to be anything significant or out of the norm. Because if you look as a percent of revenue, for example, fuel is relatively flat.
Yehuda Silverman
Got it. And just had a question on commodities in general. So were the commodity headwinds this quarter worse than expected? And is there any way to sort of hedge or counteract weaker price in commodities?
Jon Vander Ark
Well, I mean, commodity prices ticked down, right, throughout the quarter. So when we were exiting Q2, they were in like the $140 range, $135, $140 and you can kind of see for the average for Q3, $126 exiting about $120, right. So they have been stepping down sequentially that. So when you think about getting a third-party hedge, it’s a pretty thin market, quite honestly. So more what we’ve done is we’ve moved the model to charge the fee-for-service. So for the collection itself of those materials or the processing of the material at one of our third-party facilities, we’re charging the fee. And then we split with our customers the ultimate sale of the commodity. So again, we’re earning a good return on the services we’re providing and you accept some level of volatility with the ultimate commodity sale, but that’s just inherent to the business.
Yehuda Silverman
Got it. Thanks.
Operator
Your next question will come from Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research. Please go ahead.
Rob Wertheimer
Thanks and good evening. You just touched on this a minute ago, but ex the labor one-offs, labor productivity actually looked pretty good in one of your better quarters. Is there anything to call out there or is that normal variability?
Jon Vander Ark
Well, no, labor productivity, I would say, if you take a look at labor as a percent of revenue, just in the quarter, we’ve seen improvement of 70 basis points.
Rob Wertheimer
Yeah.
Jon Vander Ark
Right, on that front. So that’s going to be a continuation of the benefits that we’re getting from our RISE [Phonetic] platform where we’re producing productivity benefits within our collection business. But also just as we’ve said, when you think of the margin expansion, a lot of that is the price in excess of your cost inflation. So with labor being one of your largest cost inputs, the place where you’re going to see that the most is labor improving as a percent of revenue.
Rob Wertheimer
Totally fair. Thank you. And then just a small one. You touched on manufacturing and some of the — we’ve seen that obviously in the industrial world. Any — there’s a lot of cross currents in construction, any trend line you saw through the quarter? You got interest rate cuts, you got large projects, you got lots of cross currents. So just curious if there’s any movement in one direction or the other. Thank you.
Jon Vander Ark
No, not yet. Haven’t really seen signs of life. Can we remain like in the longer term, very bullish, medium to longer term on construction in terms of single-family, multifamily, I feel there’s a lot of pent-up demand in most of the markets across our thousand dots of the map in the US and Canada.
Rob Wertheimer
Yeah.
Jon Vander Ark
I think we probably need just a little more time before we start to see that take off.
Rob Wertheimer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question will come from David Manthey with Baird. Please go ahead.
David Manthey
Yeah, thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Back to Environmental Solutions. When you talk about stabilization, I’m just trying to understand definitionally, are you saying that the declines should start lessening here or are you talking about absolute revenues sort of flattening sequentially from 3Q to 4Q?
Brian DelGhiaccio
Yeah, I would say a little bit of both, right? So again, at the same time, we saw just from an overall revenue perspective and look, one month doesn’t make a trend, but September was better than August and we’re starting to see something look similar in October from an overall revenue perspective. And then you think about just the year-over-year that would just naturally lend itself to the year-over-year decline starting to modulate. Now Jon mentioned earlier, one of the things you have to remember is last year, right, we had almost $50 million of revenue in the quarter from a single emergency response job, right? So that’s something that we have to anniversary [Phonetic]. So that’s going to create a tough comp and about $15 million of that carried over into Q1. So you don’t get that out of the numbers until you get — from a year-over-year perspective until we get into Q2 of ’26.
David Manthey
Right, okay. That’s great color sequentially. And then looking back to the ECOL [Phonetic] data back in 2021. Has the data changed much in terms of the top verticals in Environmental Solutions? So is it still chemicals, metals and general manufacturing making up, 40%, 45% of the total?
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah. It’s a very diversified set of end markets. And we don’t probably don’t cut it exactly the same way that the legacy company did, but very strong manufacturing will be the largest probably defined, chemicals, oil and gas, general — continuous slow general production. But utilities, government, there’s a broad mix of end markets that we serve.
David Manthey
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
The next question will come from Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Stephanie Moore
Hi, good afternoon. Thank you. I wanted to ask maybe a higher-level question on the solid waste business as it relates to pricing. I think you guys as well as the industry continue to execute well on pricing and getting good pricing, obviously in the open market as well. As you think about the success that you’ve had in the open market, what would you attribute the major drivers of that be? Do you think it’s just general rationality? I mean, obviously inflationary, but we also hear a lot from general customers with price fatigue and inflation fatigue. So I’d love to get your updated thoughts. I mean, is that your ability to capture price because of your technology investments, but I think just any updated thoughts on that would be helpful. Thank you.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah. I think there’s a lot of elements to the equation. I’d say the most important one from a macro-level, we’re a very, very small percentage of most customers’ cost structure. And in a macro sense, I think the industry is underpriced. You think about a resident, their bill was less than their Starbucks bill every month. And we’re taking a $400,000 truck and driving it — taking it to a recycling center that costs $50 million, $60 million to build or a landfill where we’re going to rent you a piece of real estate forever and probably produce electricity or gas on the back end of that.
So I think the value proposition across the industry is phenomenal and we’re again a very small portion of people’s cost structure. So that creates a lot of pricing opportunity. I think if you kind of come down a level and look at our company, we focus really hard on customer mix. Now some customers are very price sensitive and we underpenetrated in that part of the market, overpenetrated and customers who are willing to pay more for the value and then have a lot of tools and sophistication in terms of how we price customers to make sure that they not only take the price, but they stay forever.
Stephanie Moore
Got it. Appreciate it. And then just one follow-up on the M&A commentary. I appreciate the look into 2026. I wanted to also gauge your appetite and maybe doing a larger deal M&A at this time, whether in solid waste or within ES? Thanks.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, we were maintain a perspective on everything, all right, as fiduciaries of the business on that front. And I wouldn’t say anything is impossible. I’d also say our focus is on small and medium-sized deals as we look into the rest of 2025, but even into ’26 and ’27, I feel like we’ve got a very strong pipeline in both in Recycling & Waste and ES.
Stephanie Moore
Great. Thank you so much.
Operator
The next question will come from Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Shlomo Rosenbaum
Hi, I think — thank you for taking my questions. I just want to get straight a little bit about the commentary about things getting better in ES towards the end of the quarter. How much of it is you’re figuring out the issues with the pricing in specific areas and how much of it is finding kind of a bottom and starting to improve? And then I just wanted to ask you a little bit about the pricing just in general. Do you feel like — you figured out where you’re getting it not exactly on the mark? And is there a thought that we’ve kind of gotten to the point where we’ve — the outsized pricing is kind of behind us or is it really just those emergency response type stuff is really the only place where you feel like you’ve pushed it too far.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, maybe let me start at the end. I think we’ve taken up margins fairly dramatically since we closed the US Ecology acquisition. So tremendous progress. And that wasn’t all price, but a lot of that was price. And we think there’s certainly more room to go. We’re facing obviously a very challenging demand environment. And so getting that balance right primarily on event-based work is certainly an opportunity for us and the team. Part of this is just that this industry itself is at a different stage of evolution and maturity than the recycling waste industry, where we’ve been at recycling & waste a long time in terms of the tools, sophistication, commercial capabilities of our sales team to get that balance just right to try to win the job of maximize price.
And we’re still climbing the ladder on the Environmental Solutions side of the business. And then if you work your way back into what kind of momentum we’re seeing, I think we are seeing certainly a stabilization of the overall market, not strength and rapid recovery, but a stabilization. And then you layer on top of that and our level of speed, we’re getting very, very dialed into specific opportunities and those two things together give us a positive outlook?
Shlomo Rosenbaum
Okay. And then just overall on the pricing, you said you’ve taken a lot over there. Would you say you were still in early innings, mid-innings? Where do you feel you are in terms of that opportunity ex the area where you’re kind of recalibrating right now.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, I’d say longer term, we still think these assets are underpriced, right? These assets on the post-collection side, these assets are impossible to replicate, right? And we sell things here rather than price by the ton, oftentimes by the pound or sometimes by the ounce. And so we think there’s plenty of room to go. We’ve also said this isn’t going to be a straight line of progress. There’s going to be ebbs and flows on our path. And so in any given quarter, like the one we just saw, there might be a little bit of pullback. And I think if you measure this thing very narrowly quarter-to-quarter, I think you’re going to miss the picture. If you measure year-over-year, I think you’re going to get a much better view of where we think progress in this business goes.
Shlomo Rosenbaum
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator
The next question will come from William Grippin with Barclays. Please go ahead.
William Grippin
Great. Thanks for the time. Just wanted to come back to the union contract settlement here. Was there any impact, I guess, from the strikes on revenue in the quarter? I know you made the adjustment to EBITDA, but just wondering if there was any impact on the revenue side. And then any sort of outlook in terms of cost inflation in ’26 related to that contract sort of relative to your expectations in your commentary.
Jon Vander Ark
Let me take the first part there. So there was an impact on revenue. There was a recognition of about $16 million worth of credits, which reduced the reported revenue. Now when you look at adjusted EBITDA, while we didn’t adjust the revenue, we did include those credits in the adjusted EBITDA. So the add back of $56 million includes those $16 million worth of revenue credits in order to drive adjusted EBITDA.
And in terms of longer term impact on labor, we think the answer is no. We work very hard whether our frontline people are represented by a union contract or not that we’re keeping them in line and we want our people to be amongst the best paid in the local markets in which they operate. But it’s very critical for us to make sure that they’re not out of market. And when people get out of market, right, it hurts everybody. We lose work and we ultimately have to let go of drivers and technicians. So getting that number right is important to us and that’s why we took the stand we did this past year on the set of contracts. But going forward, we feel like we’re in a very good position to maintain our price/cost spread as we talked about before.
William Grippin
I appreciate that. And then just coming to the ES business, you mentioned in your pipeline possibly having some opportunities related to M&A for ES. Any additional color you could provide there on what types of assets or services that you might be looking at.
Jon Vander Ark
Sure. Yeah, certainly look for certain verticals that we’re in, we’d like to get in further. So life sciences and biopharma and high tech are certainly attractive to us and we’ve got great positions regionally, but not in every region. There’s plenty of field services locations geographically where we have really strong footprints in Recycling & Waste, but don’t have a field services location that creates an immediate cross-sell opportunity for us. And then we’re always interested in any post-collection assets, anything with infrastructure we feel is very attractive to the network as well.
William Grippin
Perfect. I appreciate that. I’ll pass it along. Thank you.
Operator
The next question will come from Tony Bancroft with Gabelli Funds. Please go ahead.
Tony Bancroft
Thank you, gentlemen, and great job on the quarter. I know I’m sort of beating a dead horse here, but with M&A game plan, maybe another way to look at it. It’s obviously a huge draw of energy demand with data centers. Any thoughts maybe just longer-term view or vision of M&A in sort of in that space with E&P or energy, energy-based or is it more of the traditional stuff? Maybe you just could talk about that a little bit.
Jon Vander Ark
Yeah, that will certainly help us on the margins. Those things get construction — constructed, there’s opportunities around earth moving and soil and remediation opportunities. And then, listen, our landfills, less than half of them have landfill energy projects on them. And could those projects be electric based kind of back to the future in the sense that that’s where we serve those projects and then it’s been all RNG over the last few years. We’re certainly exploring some technologies around getting after lower flow sites, smaller landfills and electricity projects might be part of that and that might be feed into that grid. I’d say from a macro standpoint, we don’t participate — those facilities don’t create a ton of ongoing waste and recycling or Environmental Solutions opportunities once they’re up and constructed. But during the construction phase, we’ll certainly participate.
William Grippin
Great. Thanks so much. Good job.
Operator
At this time, there are no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Vander Ark for closing remarks. Please go ahead, sir. Thank you.
Jon Vander Ark
Thank you, Chuck. Before we conclude today’s call, I want to take a moment to recognize the great work of the entire Republic Services team. The team’s commitment to safety, sustainability and providing outstanding service continues to drive our performance. We are confident in our strategy, our people and our ability to continue delivering value to our customers, communities and shareholders. Have a good evening and be safe.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]