FPO Article 19 / 49 / 50This material is communicated only to persons reasonably believed to be Investment Professionals (FPO 2005, Article 19), High Net Worth Companies (Article 49), or Certified Sophisticated Investors (Article 50), and to sovereign agencies, treasury teams, sovereign wealth funds and DFIs acting institutionally. It is not directed at retail clients and is not a financial promotion under FSMA s.21 to such persons.
NATDAQ · Natural Capital Exchange · A division of EPC Holdings Ltd · Sovereign issued · Validated · Authorised
NNATDAQ
Sovereign · Americas · Latin America and the Caribbean

Mexico

What NATDAQ unlocks for the country — the asset stays sovereign, participating farmers and communities receive a defined share of the cashflow, and institutions take an equitable share alongside them. Per-asset economics, jobs, GDP uplift, and rural-economy impact across 1, 5, 10 and 25-year horizons.

ISO MEXOECD memberDeveloping market← All sovereigns
Economic finance
$151bn
Total NATDAQ-channel financing, 25-year horizon
Finance income
$4.2bn
Annual sovereign cashflow (Conservation + MSW)
Materials
$480bn
Cumulative timber value, 25-year horizon
Carbon
$474.4m
Creditable flux NPV · 6 GtCO₂e stock
QG value
6m jobs · $358.4bn GDP
Quantitative growth contribution, 25y
Asset class · Conservation

15.3% of Mexico's land is under protection.

The Conservation Note is priced at a sovereign-floor of $100/ha/year, written on a 20-year tenor. Stacking a new tranche each year creates permanent conservation funding. Revenue is generated 50% from sustainable forestry within the conserved estate and 50% from ecosystem-service outcomes — carbon, ESG, SDG, CSR, water, and sustainability programmes.

Protected area
297.4k km²
29,742,435 ha
Sovereign floor
$100/ha/yr
Auditable line-by-hectare
Annual sovereign revenue
$3bn
Across 29,742,435 ha
Note tenor
20-year
Stack annually for permanent conservation
Note PV per stack
$37.1bn
One annual issuance
Forestry component
$1.5bn
50% of annual revenue
Ecosystem outcome component
$1.5bn
50% — carbon · ESG · SDG · CSR · water
Direct management jobs
59.5k
Rangers + protected-area staff
Total jobs (incl. indirect)
89.2k
Including downstream
GDP uplift (25y)
$92.7bn
Sovereign multiplier applied
Marine PA share
22.6%
Of territorial waters
Asset class · Forestry

654.4k km² of forest. 33.8% of Mexico.

Each Tree Note is sized as a defined fraction of the projected harvest value of its species over the rotation period. The majority of note proceeds flows directly to participating farmers as working capital ahead of harvest; the farmer also retains a fixed share of the harvest revenue at maturity. The structure is designed so capital reaches the ground, not administrative overhead.

Top 25 tree species — current and forecast value
Top 25 catalogue: full per-tree fill is researcher commission (see methodology)
SpeciesArea (km²)Current annual marketFuture market (25y)Tree Note valueQG market valueRotation (y)Data
Mexican weeping pine
Pinus patula
50,000$3bn$75bn$72bn$165.6bn22Deep
Teak (plantation SE)
Tectona grandis
4,000$1.7bn$42bn$43.2bn$99.4bn22Indicative
Durango pine
Pinus durangensis
35,000$1.3bn$31.5bn$26.3bn$60.4bn50Indicative
Mexican cypress
Cupressus lusitanica
12,000$1.2bn$29.4bn$23.5bn$54.1bn25Indicative
Spanish cedar
Cedrela odorata
6,000$1.1bn$26.3bn$24bn$55.2bn30Deep
Guanacaste / parota
Enterolobium cyclocarpum
14,000$840m$21bn$18.2bn$41.9bn50Indicative
Caoba / mahoganyCITES II
Swietenia macrophylla
9,000$810m$20.3bn$23bn$52.8bn80Indicative
Eucalipto (SE plantation)
Eucalyptus urophylla
5,000$770m$19.3bn$13.3bn$30.6bn8Indicative
Smooth-bark pine
Pinus pseudostrobus
16,000$728m$18.2bn$14.6bn$33.5bn45Indicative
Primavera / roble
Tabebuia rosea
12,000$720m$18bn$17.1bn$39.3bn50Indicative
Aztec pine / ocote
Pinus teocote
22,000$660m$16.5bn$13.2bn$30.4bn55Indicative
Arizona pine
Pinus arizonica
20,000$600m$15bn$12.5bn$28.7bn55Indicative
Montezuma pine
Pinus montezumae
18,000$585m$14.6bn$11.7bn$26.9bn55Indicative
Cooper pine
Pinus cooperi
14,000$504m$12.6bn$10.5bn$24.2bn50Indicative
Apache pine
Pinus engelmannii
16,000$480m$12bn$9.6bn$22.1bn55Indicative
Tzalam
Lysiloma spp.
14,000$448m$11.2bn$10.5bn$24.2bn60Indicative
Ocote chino
Pinus oocarpa
14,000$420m$10.5bn$8.4bn$19.3bn50Indicative
Netleaf oak
Quercus rugosa
22,000$396m$9.9bn$8.8bn$20.2bn90Indicative
Encino
Quercus crassifolia
18,000$324m$8.1bn$7.2bn$16.6bn90Indicative
Guapaque / courbaril
Hymenaea courbaril
7,000$315m$7.9bn$7.9bn$18.1bn90Indicative
Laurel oak
Quercus laurina
16,000$288m$7.2bn$6.4bn$14.7bn90Indicative
Sacred fir / oyamel
Abies religiosa
9,000$252m$6.3bn$5bn$11.6bn80Indicative
Mexican rosewood / granadilloCITES II
Dalbergia granadillo
3,000$225m$5.6bn$5.3bn$12.1bn80Indicative
Mexican Douglas-fir
Pseudotsuga menziesii
5,000$200m$5bn$4.4bn$10.1bn70Indicative
Copal
Bursera spp.
16,000$144m$3.6bn$3.2bn$7.4bn60Indicative

Current annual market: area × yield × ex-farm price. Future market (25y): sustained-yield total ex-farm value. Tree Note value: sovereign-grade financing the species can support, computed under the EPC structuring model. QG market value: economic contribution to GDP (multiplier applied). CITES II species carry a trade restriction — permit chain-of-custody is required before they can list as freely-tradeable inventory. Per-species areas are planning-grade modelled estimates from national inventory species-composition shares; prices are mid-points of live ranges (tropical hardwood moves 20–40% intra-year on ITTO reports).

Cumulative harvest value (25y)
$480bn
Future ex-farm value, all species
Tree Note financing unlocked
$96bn
Sovereign-grade institutional capital
Operational capital deployed
$76.8bn
On-the-ground programme spend
Farmer total
$109.4bn
Working capital + harvest revenue
Direct forestry jobs
2.3m
Labour-intensive plantation profile
Indirect jobs
3.5m
Sawmill, pulp, panel, transport
GDP uplift (25y)
$220.8bn
Sovereign multiplier applied
Forest trend (decade)
-0.65 pp
2010-2020
Carbon · Flux-based, not stock-priced

Mexico's forest carbon — the flux is the asset.

Mexico's forests hold 6 GtCO₂e. The forest is a net sink of 5 MtCO₂e/yr — the channel monetises the incremental sequestration beyond business-as-usual. A carbon credit monetises the annual flux, not the standing stock. We report the recurring credit stream and the one-off stock asset value separately, and price against the CCP-labelled nature-based band — explicitly not the EU ETS compliance price.

Recurring credit revenue (the financeable stream)
Addressable flux
5 MtCO₂e/yr
Incremental sink
Additionality factor
40%
Conservative — only beyond BAU is creditable
Buffer + leakage
−15% / −10%
tropical biome (Verra non-permanence + leakage)
Net creditable flux
1.5 MtCO₂e/yr
≈ 0.0 tCO₂e/ha/yr
Nature credit band
$15–35/tCO₂
CCP-labelled nature-based (NOT EU ETS)
Annual credit revenue
$33.7m
At band mid, net of verification cost
Recurring credit NPV
$474.4m
25y discounted at 5%
Carbon price as-of
2026-05-01
Refreshed daily when feed connected
Stock asset value (one-off balance-sheet figure — NOT credit income)
Forest carbon stock
6 GtCO₂e
Biomass + soil organic carbon
Stock asset value
$15bn
Band mid, deeply haircut (stock is not saleable)
EU ETS (macro context only)
€75/tCO₂
Compliance market — not used to value forest credits

Method: creditable flux = (project sequestration − baseline) × (1 − leakage) × (1 − buffer), valued as a discounted multi-year cash-flow (IPCC 2019; Verra VM0048 / AFOLU non-permanence tool; ART-TREES; Griscom et al. 2017). Carbon revenue is one component of the Conservation Note's 50% ecosystem-outcome share, alongside ESG, SDG, CSR, water, and sustainability. Stock data: INECC GHG Inventory; net approximately neutral.. Nature-credit price: CCP-labelled nature-based credit band (Verra VM0048 floor + ICVCM premium) (as of 2026-05-01). No live carbon tick is displayed — there is no licence-clean free real-time feed; figures are documented references refreshed on a defined cadence.

Material change · Mexico's economic trajectory

With NATDAQ vs without.

Mexico's baseline trajectory compounds at 2.5% real GDP growth and 1.5% employment growth — the dashed lines below. The solid lines add the NATDAQ-channel contribution over a 25-year build.

Real GDP, USD trillions
$0.0T$0.8T$1.6T$2.3T$3.1T$3.9TY0Y5Y10Y15Y20Y25USD trillions$3.3T$3.7T
Baseline (2.5% YoY)Baseline + NATDAQ channel
Y25 delta: +$0.4T (+10.7%)

Baseline compounded from 2024 GDP at the country's published real growth rate. NATDAQ contribution is the 25-year cumulative GDP uplift, ramped across the horizon.

Total employment, millions
0.0m18.6m37.3m55.9m74.5m93.2mY0Y5Y10Y15Y20Y25millions of jobs82.7m88.7m
Baseline (1.5% YoY)Baseline + NATDAQ jobs
Y25 delta: +6.0m (+7.3%)

Baseline employment compounded at the country's published rate. NATDAQ contribution is direct + indirect jobs ramped to steady-state over the horizon. Current agricultural workforce: 7.20m.

Baseline data: World Bank WDI 2024 / national statistical offices. NATDAQ contribution derived from the country's natural-capital programme scale and EPC's structuring model. Refresh against latest national accounts before public quotation. Methodology and full assumption registry on the methodology page.

Asset class · Municipal Solid Waste

53.1m t of MSW per year. 368 kg per capita.

The MSW Note securitises a defined sovereign-floor share of the recoverable waste-stream revenue — gate fees, post-sort commodities, and energy recovery — discounted to a 25-year tenor. Capital flows into collection, sorting and processing infrastructure; the income stream funds the note.

Annual generation
53.1m t
Collection rate
84.0%
Recycling rate
9.0%
Recoverable value
$40/t
Blended gate + commodity + energy
Annual recoverable
$2.1bn
MSW Note PV
$18bn
25-year tenor, sovereign-grade
Direct jobs
31.9k
Collection, sort, transfer, landfill
Indirect jobs
132.8k
Recycling, EfW, remanufacturing
Quantitative Growth Forecast

What NATDAQ unlocks for Mexico.

Aggregate financing, jobs, and GDP uplift across all four asset classes over four time horizons. All figures derive from the same model assumptions and sources documented in the methodology footer.

HorizonFinancing unlockedOperational capitalDirect jobsIndirect jobsTotal jobsGDP uplift% of country GDPFarmer total
1-year$58.9bn$47.1bn2.4m3.6m6m$146.4bn8.13%$4.4bn
5-year$74.2bn$59.4bn2.4m3.6m6m$181.7bn10.10%$21.9bn
10-year$93.4bn$74.7bn2.4m3.6m6m$225.9bn12.55%$43.8bn
25-year$151bn$120.8bn2.4m3.6m6m$358.4bn19.91%$109.4bn
Channel finance · Farmer impact

The farmer's share.

Participating farmers and community land-holders receive working capital upfront — at planting — plus a defined harvest revenue share at maturity. The structure deploys capital to the ground, not into administrative overhead.

Working capital upfront
$61.4bn
Paid at planting
Harvest revenue
$48bn
Paid at harvest
Lifetime farmer total
$109.4bn
Participating households
112k
Estimated land-holders
Rural-economy spending
$110.6bn
Downstream local consumption
Total jobs (full chain)
6m
Post-farming employment

A landing pad for the rural economy.

Traditional agriculture is shrinking under automation, climate pressure, and consolidation. The NATDAQ channel creates skilled rural employment in forestry, conservation management, and waste recovery — work that absorbs displaced farm labour and adds capacity beyond current ag headcount.

Current agricultural workforce
7.20m
12.6% of total employment, 2022
NATDAQ channel — direct jobs (25y)
2.4m
33% of current ag workforce
NATDAQ channel — total jobs (25y)
6m
84% of current ag workforce
Reading this

Mexico's on-farm workforce of 7.20m faces structural decline. The channel does not displace those workers — it offers a credible re-employment path in plantation establishment, silviculture, ranger management, sorting infrastructure, and processing. ILO modelled.

Returns benchmark · Profit, not cost

Sustainability through profit, not cost.

Institutions participating in the Mexico Tree Note take an equitable share of the cashflow — alongside participating farmers and the sovereign. The cashflow share sits against the same return benchmarks as a corporate equity allocation, and uniquely also delivers sustainability metrics, brand value, and shareholder value through profit, not through the cost line.

BenchmarkAnnualised returnSource
NATDAQ Tree Note (this country, sovereign-grade)6.2%Annualised investor cashflow share
Tesco PLC — operating margin on turnover4.9%FY25
Tesco PLC — Return on Capital Employed14.6%FY24/25
US broad market — Return on Invested Capital10.1%Damodaran Jan 2026
US Paper / Forest Products — ROIC10.4%Damodaran Jan 2026
US Farming / Agriculture — ROIC7.7%Damodaran Jan 2026
US REITs (yield comparator) — ROIC3.7%Damodaran Jan 2026
Sustainable timber funds — historical net IRR5.9%GIIN benchmark

ROCE / ROIC reflect each benchmark's published return on capital. The NATDAQ Tree Note figure is the projected annualised investor cashflow share — institutions participate in an equitable share of the cashflow, alongside the participating farmers and the sovereign. Past performance is not indicative of future results; figures are illustrative for institutional discussion.

Cross-channel · Litdaq

Litigation finance channel.

Mexico is rated developing on the EPC Litdaq market-depth scale. The cross-channel position lets a sovereign issuer monetise commercial litigation cashflows through the same EPC institutional framework as natural-capital notes.

Market depth
Developing
Legal services / GDP
1.1%
Notes

USMCA arbitration channel.

The only venue that does this

No other exchange coordinates this trade and data.

Sovereign natural-capital programmes have historically been financed bilaterally — bank by bank, project by project, with no common pricing surface and no institutional secondary market. NATDAQ is the only venue that lists sovereign-grade conservation, forestry, MSW, and litigation finance instruments on a single coordinated, AiGLe-graded surface — with a published per-country dataset, a structuring model that links natural assets to financeable cashflows, and a consistent institutional disclosure standard.

The asset stays on the sovereign balance sheet. The data stays sovereign. Only the cashflow rights are securitised. That coordination is the product.

Approach & sources

How the figures are produced

All financing, jobs and GDP figures are produced by the NATDAQ structuring model — proprietary to EPC Holdings — applied to the country's natural-capital dataset. The model derives Tree Note, Conservation Note, and MSW Note pricing from species, biome, and waste-stream characteristics, and projects on-the-ground capital deployment, sustained employment, and GDP uplift over the note tenor.

Notes are AiGLe-graded prior to listing. The senior sovereign tranche of every NATDAQ-listed instrument is graded under AiGLe's published Four-Pillar analytical framework.

Primary input sources

  • Forest area & change: FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment 2020.
  • Protected area share: World Bank / Protected Planet (UNEP-WCMC).
  • MSW: World Bank What a Waste 2.0; Eurostat for European countries.
  • Sectoral employment intensity: FAO Forest Sector Outlook; ILO sectoral briefs.
  • Ecosystem-service value: de Groot et al. 2012; Costanza et al. 2014.
  • Sovereign multiplier: IMF Fiscal Monitor / IMF WP 20/199.

Per-species market values are indicative ranges from ITTO and FAO sectoral data. Country-specific figures are refined under EPC's structuring engagement prior to issuance. Full structuring methodology and the NATDAQ rulebook are available to qualified institutional counterparties under NDA.