By Austen Hufford | Photographs by Andrea Morales for The Wall Street Journal

CORINTH, Miss.—Construction equipment maker Caterpillar wants to sell engines—again and again.

Every day, old, beat-up and broken-down engines from mining trucks and compactors return to a factory here to be inspected, taken apart and rebuilt again as new. The effort, which in 2021 took in an estimated 127 million pounds of equipment to be reprocessed, is part of a push by the construction equipment giant to meet environmental goals and boost revenue from services, which Caterpillar said could also give the company an edge over rivals.

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This post first appeared on wsj.com

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