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If You Invested in Ecolomondo (ECLMF)

Industrials · Waste Management · OTC Link
Looking for the current price? See the ECLMF quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$502
-49.8% total -60.2% CAGR
Bought on Aug 19, 2025 at $0.15
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$401
-59.9% total -17.2% CAGR
Bought on Jul 12, 2021 at $0.19

What $1,000 or $10,000 in ECLMF Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Nov 10, 2017
$1,000 $502 -50% $401 -60% $257 -74%
$10,000 $5,019 -50% $4,012 -60% $2,565 -74%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

ECLMF vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

ECLMF annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $0.30 $0.27 -10.6% -10.6%
2018 $0.27 $0.19 -30.3% -37.7%
2019 $0.19 $0.16 -14.6% -46.8%
2020 $0.16 $0.20 +25.0% -33.5%
2021 $0.20 $0.43 +114.4% +42.5%
2022 $0.43 $0.39 -10.2% +27.9%
2023 $0.39 $0.14 -63.7% -53.6%
2024 $0.14 $0.06 -58.2% -80.6%
2025 $0.14 $0.13 -7.1% -56.9%
2026 $0.13 $0.08 -40.5% -74.3%

About Ecolomondo

Industrials · OTC Link

Ecolomondo Corporation (OTCQB: ECLMF) is a Canadian cleantech company headquartered in Québec that focuses on the commercialization of its proprietary Thermal Decomposition Process (TDP) and the deployment of TDP turnkey facilities. The company is classified in facilities support and waste management-related services through its work in processing end-of-life and scrap tires into reusable resources. Ecolomondo’s activities center on recovering high-value commodities from tire waste and supplying these recovered materials for use in new products, with an emphasis on circular economy principles.

According to company disclosures, Ecolomondo has a 25-year history dedicated to developing and refining its TDP technology and building facilities that apply this process at industrial scale. TDP is described as a technically proven form of advanced pyrolysis that converts scrap tires into reusable outputs, notably recovered carbon black (rCB), oil, syngas (process gas), fiber, and steel. The company states that by producing rCB as a substitute for virgin carbon black, its process can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions compared with conventional carbon black production.

Business model and revenue sources

Ecolomondo’s business model is built around building, owning and operating TDP turnkey facilities and generating revenues from the sale of end-products produced at those plants, as well as from tipping or disposal fees for processing scrap tires. Company communications explain that revenue streams from TDP facilities such as the Hawkesbury plant come from:

  • Sales of recovered carbon black (rCB)
  • Sales of tire-derived oil or pyrolysis oil
  • Sales of process gas or syngas
  • Sales of recovered steel and, where applicable, fiber
  • Tipping fees for the disposal and processing of scrap or end-of-life tires

The company emphasizes that these outputs are intended to be reused in manufacturing, particularly in rubber and plastic applications where rCB can replace virgin carbon black, and as feedstock or energy sources in other industrial processes. Ecolomondo positions itself as a producer and reseller of recovered resources and as a builder and operator of TDP turnkey facilities.

Thermal Decomposition Process (TDP) technology

Ecolomondo describes its proprietary TDP as a more advanced and technically proven form of tire pyrolysis. Over the years, the company’s technological teams report having addressed challenges that affected many competing technologies, specifically in areas such as:

  • Pre-filtration and reactor cooling
  • Reactor rotation and heat curve development
  • Water recycling and humidity removal
  • Processing of recovered carbon black, including hydrocarbon removal
  • Mass monitoring and system automation
  • Safety testing and emissions control and monitoring

The company states that TDP is environmentally friendly, highlighting that producing rCB through its process reduces greenhouse gas emissions by about 90% compared with producing virgin carbon black. It also notes that production at its Hawkesbury and Shamrock facilities is expected to reduce CO2 emissions by tens of thousands of tons per year when operating at projected capacities.

Hawkesbury TDP facility (Ontario, Canada)

A core asset for Ecolomondo is its Hawkesbury TDP facility in Ontario, described as a first-of-its-kind, 2-reactor turnkey TDP plant. Company materials indicate that:

  • The facility building is approximately 46,200 square feet with an indoor clearance of about 28 feet.
  • It houses multiple production departments, including tire shredding, thermal decomposition, recovered carbon black refining, and oil fractionation.
  • Once fully operational, the plant is expected to process on the order of 12,786 to roughly 14,000 metric tons (or about 1.3 million units) of scrap or end-of-life tires per year, depending on the specific projection cited.
  • Expected output ranges, based on company disclosures, include several thousand metric tons or millions of pounds of recovered carbon black, thousands of metric tons or tens of thousands of barrels of oil, along with significant quantities of steel, process gas (syngas), and fiber.

The Hawkesbury facility has been ramping up production. Company news releases report revenues from the sale of end-products such as rCB and tire-derived oil, with customers placing repeat orders and expressing satisfaction with product quality. Ecolomondo notes that the plant has completed testing of its reactors and reached optimal payloads per production cycle, and that it has received certification from the Technical Standards and Safety Authority (TSSA) of Ontario to use syngas produced from TDP cycles as the energy source to fire at least one of its reactors.

Ecolomondo also highlights that the Hawkesbury facility has obtained International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC) and ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, and ISO 45001:2018 certification for its integrated management system. These certifications relate to quality, environmental impact, health and safety at work, and supply chain traceability for its end-products.

Shamrock TDP project (Texas, USA)

Beyond Hawkesbury, Ecolomondo is developing the Shamrock project, a planned 6-reactor TDP facility in Shamrock, Texas. Company disclosures describe this project as significantly larger than the Hawkesbury plant, with projected processing capabilities of around 42,000 metric tons or several million end-of-life tires per year. Expected output figures provided by the company include:

  • Approximately 15,900 metric tons or tens of millions of pounds of recovered carbon black
  • More than 100,000 barrels or tens of thousands of metric tons of oil
  • Several thousand metric tons or millions of pounds of steel
  • Thousands of metric tons or millions of pounds of syngas and fiber

The company states that the Shamrock facility is designed to be roughly three times the size of the Hawkesbury plant in terms of projected output. Ecolomondo has indicated a total projected construction cost of about US$93 million and has referenced plans to finance the project in part through a Private Activity Bond supported by local economic development entities.

Mission, vision and strategy

Ecolomondo articulates a mission to be a contributing participant in a dynamic circular economy by producing and supplying large quantities of recovered resources that can be reused in manufacturing. Its vision is to be a producer and reseller of recovered resources by building and operating TDP facilities located near feedstock, labor and offtake customers in industrialized countries.

The company’s stated strategy is to become a global builder and operator of TDP turnkey facilities, initially specializing in the processing of end-of-life tires (ELTs). It plans to expand in North America and Europe and to continue research and development to keep its TDP technology advanced. Ecolomondo also emphasizes environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations, noting that it tracks or plans to track metrics such as health and safety, injury rates, gender diversity, ethics, anticorruption, ESG reporting and board independence.

Environmental and sustainability focus

Environmental impact is a central part of Ecolomondo’s positioning. The company states that:

  • TDP reduces greenhouse gas emissions by about 90% compared with producing virgin carbon black.
  • Production of rCB at Hawkesbury and Shamrock is expected to reduce CO2 emissions by tens of thousands of tons per year at each facility when operating at projected capacities.
  • ISCC certification of the Hawkesbury facility supports traceability and feedstock identity for its end-products, which can add commercial value as they remain traceable through the supply chain.

These factors position Ecolomondo within the broader cleantech and waste-to-resource segment of the waste management and remediation services sector, focusing on tire recycling and recovered materials.

Capital markets and financing

Ecolomondo’s common shares trade on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol ECM and in the United States on the OTCQB market under the symbol ECLMF. The company has disclosed multiple financing arrangements to support construction and commercialization of its facilities, including:

  • A project financing loan with Export Development Canada (EDC) to fund construction of the Hawkesbury facility, later restructured with revised maturity, interest rate caps and payment schedules.
  • Additional funding and loan conversions from a company controlled by its controlling shareholder, including a shares-for-debt transaction and further advances to support commercialization of Hawkesbury.

Company releases also mention the engagement of a market liquidity provider on the TSX Venture Exchange to help maintain an orderly market for its shares, subject to regulatory approval.

Operational progress and customers

News releases describe Ecolomondo’s progress in ramping up operations at Hawkesbury, including:

  • Testing and certifying reactors and achieving optimal payloads per cycle.
  • Generating revenues from the sale of end-products such as rCB and tire-derived oil.
  • Securing repeat orders from customers who have expressed satisfaction with product quality.
  • Supplying multiple truckloads of rCB to major customers, including U.S.-based offtakers, and shipping numerous tanker loads of tire-derived oil.

The company notes that, despite growing revenues, the Hawkesbury facility has operated at a loss while still in its ramp-up phase. It has also indicated that it continues to hire and train staff across departments such as tire shredding, thermal operations and rCB processing to support increasing production volumes.

ESG, certifications and governance practices

Ecolomondo highlights several certifications and ESG-related initiatives in its disclosures:

  • ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015 and ISO 45001:2018 certifications for its integrated management system, addressing quality, environmental management and occupational health and safety.
  • ISCC certification for the Hawkesbury facility, supporting traceability and sustainability claims for its products.
  • ESG measurement plans covering health and safety, injury rates, gender diversity, ethics, anticorruption, ESG reporting and board independence.

These elements are presented by the company as part of its approach to quality control, environmental stewardship and corporate governance.

Position within the sector

Within the broader administrative, support and waste management sector, Ecolomondo positions itself as a cleantech company focused on tire recycling and recovered materials. Its activities intersect with facilities support services through the operation of specialized processing plants that handle end-of-life tires and convert them into reusable commodities. The company’s emphasis on proprietary technology, circular economy principles, and certifications such as ISO and ISCC differentiates its profile within this space.

FAQs about Ecolomondo Corporation

Market Cap
$0.0B
Current Price
$0.08
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Frequently Asked Questions

Ecolomondo investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Ecolomondo be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Ecolomondo (ECLMF) 5 years ago on 2021-07-12, your investment would be worth $401 today, representing a -59.9% total return, growing at a compounded rate of -17.2% per year (CAGR).

Has Ecolomondo outperformed the S&P 500?

Comparison data requires at least 10 years of trading history. Use the calculator above to compare ECLMF performance over available time periods.

What is Ecolomondo's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of ECLMF over the past 5 years is -17.2%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — ECLMF's best recent year was 2021 (+114.4%) and worst was 2023 (-63.7%).

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