MassGain’s materials strategy is built around regional feedstock sourcing, supply resilience, and compatibility with existing industrial waste and materials ecosystems.
Rather than relying on exotic inputs or globally fragile supply chains, MassGain prioritizes locally available biomass streams aligned with regional production and distribution networks. And we've designed our feedstock model to benefit from the inherent volatility of the commodities market.
Core Principles
Regional First
Feedstocks are sourced as close as possible to production facilities to reduce logistics risk, cost volatility, and emissions.Industrial Availability
Inputs are selected based on existing scale, continuity, and compatibility with industrial processing—not novelty.Cost Stability Over Time
Feedstock selection emphasizes predictable pricing and long-term availability rather than short-term optimization.Supply Optionality
Multiple feedstock pathways are evaluated to reduce single-source dependency and regional disruption risk.
What This Enables
- Scalable production without fragile global inputs
- Reduced exposure to geopolitical or shipping disruptions
- Faster regional deployment of new facilities
- Alignment with local economic and regulatory conditions
What This Is Not
- Not dependent on rare or boutique materials
- Not tied to a single agricultural or industrial source
- Not speculative feedstock chemistry
- Not vulnerable to one-off supplier failures
MassGain continuously evaluates feedstock performance, availability, and regulatory considerations as production scales and regional requirements evolve.
For supply-side discussions or exploratory alignment, contact us here.