Ecolomondo Corporation has executed multiple letters of intent with tire retailers and municipalities to secure sufficient feedstock for its planned six-reactor Thermal Decomposition Process facility in Shamrock, Texas. The company confirmed committed volumes of end-of-life tires that will support operations at the new facility, which is projected to be three times the size of its existing Hawkesbury plant.
The feedstock agreements position the Shamrock project to generate tipping fee revenue similar to Ecolomondo's Hawkesbury facility. This revenue model, combined with the company's proprietary TDP technology that recovers high-value reusable commodities from scrap tire waste, creates a dual-income stream from both waste processing fees and commodity sales.
Ecolomondo expects the Shamrock plant to benefit from experience gained during Hawkesbury construction and from its modular technology, which is designed to lower capital expenditures, shorten lead times and reduce risk. The company's TDP technology recovers valuable commodities including recovered carbon black, oil, syngas, fiber and steel from scrap tire waste.
As a Canadian cleantech company with a 25-year history focused on developing and deploying TDP turnkey facilities, Ecolomondo expects to be a leading player in the cleantech space and an active contributor to the global circular economy. The company trades in Canada on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol ECM and in the United States under the symbol ECLMF.
The expansion to Texas represents a significant scaling of Ecolomondo's operations and demonstrates growing market acceptance of circular economy solutions for tire waste. The company's approach addresses both environmental concerns related to tire disposal and economic opportunities through commodity recovery. More information about the company is available at https://www.ecolomondo.com.
For business and technology leaders, this development highlights several important trends. First, it demonstrates the commercial viability of advanced recycling technologies that convert waste streams into valuable materials. Second, it shows how modular, scalable technology designs can reduce implementation risks for industrial projects. Third, it illustrates how established companies can leverage experience from initial facilities to accelerate expansion into new markets.
The Shamrock facility's planned scale suggests growing confidence in both the technology and market demand for recovered tire commodities. As circular economy principles gain traction globally, companies like Ecolomondo that can demonstrate both environmental benefits and economic returns are positioned for growth. The feedstock agreements with established tire retailers and municipalities provide supply chain stability that reduces operational risk for the new facility.
This expansion also reflects broader trends in the cleantech sector, where proven technologies are moving from pilot and demonstration scales to commercial implementation. The combination of tipping fee revenue and commodity sales creates a diversified business model that may appeal to investors looking for sustainable technologies with clear revenue streams. The company's experience with its Hawkesbury facility provides valuable operational data and process improvements that can be applied to the larger Texas operation.


