Mexican Startup Tackles Plastic Waste by Converting It to Fuel

February 3, 2025by Alba Alemán and Félix Márquez, Associated Press
Mexican Startup Tackles Plastic Waste by Converting It to Fuel
Screenshot

BOCA DEL RIO, Mexico (AP) — A startup in Mexico is trying to help get a handle on one Gulf coast city’s plastic waste problem by converting it into gasoline, diesel and other fuels.

With less than 10% of the world’s plastics being recycled, Petgas’ idea is that rather than letting discarded plastic become waste, it can become productive again as fuel.

Petgas developed a machine in the port city of Boca del Rio that uses pyrolysis, a thermodynamic process that heats plastics in the absence of oxygen, breaking it down to produce gasoline, diesel, kerosene, paraffin and coke.

Carlos Parraguirre Díaz, chief technology officer at Petgas, said that in a week, the machine can process 1.5 tons of plastics and produce 356 gallons (1,350 liters) of fuel.

The process does require propane to initiate the heating, but once the pyrolysis begins, the gas it produces is used to keep it going, according to the company. And using fuel it produces does throw off carbon dioxide, but the company says its net impact is less than comparable fuels because their fuel is lower in sulfur.

Parraguirre Díaz said that the machine shows that “we can transform that (plastic) into a product that’s useful and has high value in the world economy.”

“In place of having a dump, it’s as if we dug into the earth and found hydrocarbons that can be used by our community,” he said.

Global plastic production, already exceeding 400 million tons annually, could surge by 70% by 2040 without policy changes, according to the United Nations. China was by far the biggest exporter of plastic products in 2023, followed by Germany and the United States.

Many plastics are used for packaging. Every day, the equivalent of 2,000 garbage trucks full of plastic are dumped into the world’s oceans, rivers and lakes.

Negotiations on a treaty to end plastic pollution concluded in Busan, South Korea in December without reaching an agreement. This was supposed to be the fifth and final round to produce the first legally binding treaty on plastics pollution, including in the oceans, by the end of 2024.

Petgas envisions a circular economy where plastic is no longer waste, but rather a resource for the production of energy.

To that end, the company has organized plastic collection drives to remove bottles and other material from the city’s beaches. It encourages people to bring plastic waste to a drop-off point and receives most of its material clean and shredded from a recycler.

Alexa Mendoza, a biologist specializing in plastic contamination of the sea who is not involved in the project, said Petgas plan was a good initiative, but a “band-aid” for a massive global problem.

“It doesn’t seem to me a solution to put a band-aid on it and say, ‘great, it’s solved and let’s do it,’ but rather it could be a first step,” Mendoza said. “From there, with the help of scientists you could take into account what needs to be adjusted so that it doesn’t become another source of pollution.”

For now, Petgas donates the fuel it produces to the local fire department and food delivery services.

“The future is being able to really take production to a scale that has impact,” said Parraguirre Díaz.

A+
a-
  • Mexico
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    Energy

    April 16, 2025
    by Beth McCue
    Michigan Awards $8.1M for Solar Projects

    LANSING, Mich. — On Monday, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy announced the fourth round of Renewables... Read More

    LANSING, Mich. — On Monday, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy announced the fourth round of Renewables Ready Communities Awards. This round will support the deployment of 1,836 MW of solar power projects, which the department says is enough to power more than... Read More

    April 15, 2025
    by Dan McCue
    Bill Would Allow Renewables to Share Public Land Leased for Fossil Fuels

    WASHINGTON — A bipartisan Senate bill, the Co-Location Energy Act, would streamline permitting for future wind and solar energy projects... Read More

    WASHINGTON — A bipartisan Senate bill, the Co-Location Energy Act, would streamline permitting for future wind and solar energy projects by allowing them to be co-located on federal land with existing oil and gas leases. “Our clean energy future is here. We need to meet it,”... Read More

    April 14, 2025
    by Dan McCue
    Watchdog Says Interior Dept. Must Improve Outreach on Offshore Wind 

    WASHINGTON — Federal regulators have regularly failed to engage in “meaningful” consultation with tribes, fisheries and other stakeholders as they... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Federal regulators have regularly failed to engage in “meaningful” consultation with tribes, fisheries and other stakeholders as they consider whether to give the go-ahead to proposed offshore wind projects, a new report from the Government Accountability Office says. The agency’s review was requested by... Read More

    April 13, 2025
    by Beth McCue
    Colorado Warms to Geothermal Energy, Awards $14.4M in Project Funding

    DENVER, Colo. — “The heat beneath our feet.” That’s how Colorado Gov. Jared Polis referred to geothermal energy when he... Read More

    DENVER, Colo. — “The heat beneath our feet.” That’s how Colorado Gov. Jared Polis referred to geothermal energy when he made his recent announcement of $14.4 million in funding to support geothermal heating projects in his state. The funding from the Geothermal Energy Grant Program and Geothermal... Read More

    April 10, 2025
    by Dan McCue
    Sgamma Withdraws From Consideration for BLM Chief

    WASHINGTON — Kathleen Sgamma, a long-time oil and gas lobbyist who was President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Bureau... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Kathleen Sgamma, a long-time oil and gas lobbyist who was President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Bureau of Land Management, abruptly withdrew her nomination on Thursday, the day of her planned confirmation hearing. Sgamma’s decision was announced by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, chair... Read More

    April 10, 2025
    by Dan McCue
    Trump Makes Good on Campaign Promise, Boosting US Coal Production

    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump made good on yet another campaign promise Tuesday, signing an executive order aimed at boosting... Read More

    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump made good on yet another campaign promise Tuesday, signing an executive order aimed at boosting coal production to meet the rising demand for power due to AI and the growing market for cryptocurrencies, among other recent technological advances. However, not everyone... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top