Fragmented waste as an infrastructure opportunity.
Querétaro's metropolitan area generates roughly 2,200 tons/day of municipal solid waste and 1.2 to 1.8 million tons/year of C&D debris. Material recovery sits below 10% and formal energy recovery is virtually non-existent. Infracircular MX is engineered to capture that gap with a single integrated platform.
Quantitative diagnosis
Documented magnitudes of the gap.
Municipal solid waste (MSW)
Mexico generates on the order of 120,000 tons/day of MSW (SEMARNAT · Basic Diagnosis for Integrated Waste Management). Querétaro — one of the country's most dynamic states — generates ~2,200 t/day at state level, with ~70% concentrated in the metropolitan area (Querétaro, El Marqués, Corregidora, Huimilpan and Pedro Escobedo).
Estimated composition for the metropolitan area:
| Fraction | Estimated range | Valorization route |
|---|---|---|
| Organics | 40 – 50 % | Gasification / composting |
| Paper and cardboard | 10 – 15 % | Material recycling |
| Plastics | 10 – 15 % | Mechanical recycling + pyrolysis |
| Glass | 5 – 10 % | Material recycling |
| Metals | 3 – 5 % | Material recycling |
| Inerts / textiles / specials | Remaining | RCD center or disposal |
Order-of-magnitude figures. Final validation is done with primary sampling in the technical phase prior to Phase 1 capital close.
Construction and demolition waste (C&D)
Mexico generates 6–7 million tons/year of C&D waste (CMIC · INEGI). The metropolitan area of Querétaro produces 1.2–1.8 million tons/year, driven by manufacturing nearshoring and residential growth. Roughly 95% ends up in clandestine or unregulated dumpsites. From a circular-economy viewpoint, it is an abundant and undervalued source of recycled aggregates and manufactured sand.
Integrated-infrastructure gap
No integrated infrastructure exists in the metro area — or in most mid-size Mexican cities — that simultaneously processes MSW and C&D, produces commercial end-products, and valorizes the non-recyclable fraction into energy. Existing attempts operate in silos: sorting plants without thermal valorization, C&D recyclers without precast articulation, landfills without systematic biogas recovery.
Guiding principles
How the project operates, always.
Independence from Mexican government funds
The project is financed with private, institutional and international climate capital. Avoids dependency on federal or state subsidies to eliminate political risk.
International climate capital first
Preference for international climate funds and ESG family offices (GCF, IFC, CAF, FMO, Breakthrough Energy) over local capital with restrictive conditions.
Tier-1 technology with verifiable technical backing
European or North American machinery from manufacturers with verifiable track record and regional technical service. No first-of-a-kind industrial experiments.
Mexican talent with international experience
Priority to Mexican executives with international trajectory over foreign hires. Closes cultural and regulatory execution gaps.
Phased approach over all-or-nothing
Each phase is an independent business case that unlocks the next with proven traction. Eliminates the binary risk of raising USD 120M in a single round.
Institutional-grade documentary rigor
Memorandum, financial model, pitch deck and annexes produced to top-tier climate-fund standards. Evidence first, narrative second.
Editorial restraint on secondary activities
External materials reflect only the six core activities. Complementary initiatives are not mentioned until they exist as bankable projects in their own right.