Berliner Boersenzeitung - Scientists say they can make zero-emission cement

EUR -
AED 4.212081
AFN 72.244796
ALL 96.326254
AMD 432.939206
ANG 2.052753
AOA 1051.557417
ARS 1599.517618
AUD 1.640773
AWG 2.064125
AZN 1.954004
BAM 1.956365
BBD 2.310275
BDT 140.770644
BGN 1.960126
BHD 0.433925
BIF 3410.393136
BMD 1.146736
BND 1.468043
BOB 7.927289
BRL 6.112796
BSD 1.147086
BTN 105.893959
BWP 15.632718
BYN 3.394524
BYR 22476.027392
BZD 2.307196
CAD 1.583586
CDF 2588.183773
CHF 0.912745
CLF 0.026638
CLP 1051.798264
CNY 7.908585
CNH 7.921286
COP 4250.297051
CRC 539.68758
CUC 1.146736
CUP 30.388506
CVE 110.947169
CZK 24.575006
DJF 203.798389
DKK 7.505507
DOP 70.811404
DZD 152.098534
EGP 59.873831
ERN 17.201041
ETB 180.095353
FJD 2.555735
FKP 0.858942
GBP 0.866311
GEL 3.131037
GGP 0.858942
GHS 12.482268
GIP 0.858942
GMD 84.289519
GNF 10068.34329
GTQ 8.796427
GYD 240.009297
HKD 8.980033
HNL 30.469223
HRK 7.568004
HTG 150.425399
HUF 394.179508
IDR 19448.701448
ILS 3.605729
IMP 0.858942
INR 106.193324
IQD 1501.650912
IRR 1515669.760861
ISK 144.837141
JEP 0.858942
JMD 180.001186
JOD 0.813081
JPY 183.185402
KES 148.250483
KGS 100.281732
KHR 4609.879489
KMF 494.243657
KPW 1031.923687
KRW 1723.372775
KWD 0.352542
KYD 0.955984
KZT 561.629503
LAK 24580.28852
LBP 102690.217388
LKR 356.987932
LRD 210.139826
LSL 19.36881
LTL 3.386014
LVL 0.69365
LYD 7.316613
MAD 10.822326
MDL 20.012953
MGA 4764.688857
MKD 61.623505
MMK 2407.22186
MNT 4094.133909
MOP 9.248091
MRU 45.989896
MUR 53.33513
MVR 17.717506
MWK 1991.880986
MXN 20.584147
MYR 4.516425
MZN 73.288336
NAD 19.368805
NGN 1588.807126
NIO 42.108581
NOK 11.176343
NPR 169.430135
NZD 1.985003
OMR 0.44189
PAB 1.147146
PEN 3.95667
PGK 4.950747
PHP 68.334433
PKR 320.226483
PLN 4.298483
PYG 7401.233734
QAR 4.17842
RON 5.117429
RSD 116.646423
RUB 91.632507
RWF 1673.087957
SAR 4.303407
SBD 9.233195
SCR 17.42629
SDG 689.18878
SEK 10.871865
SGD 1.469661
SHP 0.860349
SLE 28.152796
SLL 24046.494883
SOS 655.363876
SRD 43.05769
STD 23735.121842
STN 24.826836
SVC 10.037898
SYP 128.017476
SZL 19.368796
THB 37.131738
TJS 10.995775
TMT 4.013576
TND 3.384062
TOP 2.761065
TRY 50.670488
TTD 7.780348
TWD 36.918714
TZS 2992.804645
UAH 50.591272
UGX 4313.245342
USD 1.146736
UYU 46.083908
UZS 13892.708131
VES 507.665371
VND 30152.278788
VUV 136.416071
WST 3.197489
XAF 656.155031
XAG 0.014239
XAU 0.000228
XCD 3.099112
XCG 2.067524
XDR 0.812234
XOF 655.363797
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.554311
ZAR 19.360235
ZMK 10322.005017
ZMW 22.329447
ZWL 369.248554
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

Scientists say they can make zero-emission cement
Scientists say they can make zero-emission cement / Photo: Manjunath KIRAN - AFP

Scientists say they can make zero-emission cement

Researchers on Wednesday said they were a step closer to solving one of the trickiest problems in tackling climate change -- how to keep making cement despite its enormous carbon footprint.

Text size:

In a world first, engineers from Britain's University of Cambridge have shown that cement can be recycled without the same steep cost to the environment as making it from scratch.

Cement binds concrete together but the whitish powder is highly carbon-intensive to produce, with the sector generating more than triple the emissions of global air travel.

Demand for concrete -- already the most widely used construction material on Earth -- is soaring, but the notoriously polluting industry has struggled to produce it in a less harmful way to the climate.

The team at Cambridge believes it has a solution, pioneering a method that tweaks an existing process for steel manufacturing to produce recycled cement without the associated CO2 pollution.

This discovery, published in the journal Nature, could provoke "an absolutely massive change" by providing low-cost and low-emission cement at scale, said Julian Allwood, who co-authored the research.

"It is an extremely exciting project... I think it's going to have a huge impact," said Allwood, an expert on industrial emissions and key contributor to reports from the UN's scientific panel on climate change.

To produce cement, the basic ingredient in concrete, limestone must be fired in kilns at very high temperatures usually achieved by burning fossil fuels like coal.

On top of that, limestone produces significant additional CO2 when heated.

- 'Bright hope' -

The cement industry alone accounts for nearly eight percent of human-caused CO2 emissions -- more than any country except China and the United States.

Some 14 billion cubic metres of concrete are cast every year, according to industry figures, and more still will be needed as economies and cities grow in future.

The International Energy Agency says that if emissions from the cement industry continue to increase, a pledge of carbon neutrality by 2050 will almost certainly remain out of reach.

Many efforts to produce low-carbon or so-called "green cement" are too expensive or difficult to deploy at scale, rely on unproven technologies, or don't come near zero emissions.

The Cambridge researchers approached the problem by looking at an industry that was already well established -- steel recycling, which uses electric-powered furnaces to produce the alloy.

They substituted a key ingredient in that process with old cement sourced from demolished buildings, Allwood said.

Instead of waste being produced, the end result was recycled cement ready for use in concrete, bypassing the emissions-heavy process of superheating limestone in kilns.

This method -- which has a patent pending -- was "a very low disruption innovation" requiring little change or additional cost on the part of business, Allwood said.

If powered by renewable energy, he said, these furnaces could hope to produce zero-emission concrete at scale.

"Once the electricity has no emissions, then our process would have no emissions," Allwood said.

Countries could not hope to bring CO2 emissions to zero by 2050 -- the key pledge of the Paris climate agreement -- using concrete as it exists today, he added.

"This is the big bright hope, I think," Allwood said.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)