Recycling cement paste is a cheap and efficient way to reduce cement emissions
Recycling cement paste is one of the cheapest and most efficient ways to reduce emissions from cement production, a new study has found.
The research, led by experts at Imperial College London’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and published in PNAS, highlights that waste cement paste that has undergone CO2 mineralisation is a cost effective way to reduce emissions from cement.
It found that CO2 mineralisation - a process where emitted and atmospheric CO2 is reduced by absorbing it in infrastructure like concrete, bricks, pavers, and clinker substitutes - has the potential to reduce emissions from cement production by 15%, which is the equivalent of 0.8% of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2020.
Of the 10 technologies studied that use CO2 mineralisation, the researchers found that recycled cement paste made from demolished concrete was most effective and economical. Cement paste is a glue-like substance that binds materials like sand or gravel together to create concrete. Recycled cement paste typically originates from old infrastructure, like demolished office buildings.
Lead author Dr Rupert J. Myers, from Imperial’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, said: “In the fight against climate change, reducing emissions from the production of cement, and the construction industry more widely, is challenging. Our findings suggest that CO2 mineralised cement paste could be a champion technology in helping us decarbonise the sector.”
Examining company claims
Construction materials are responsible for around 13% of global greenhouse gas emissions - most of which come from manufacturing concrete and steel. Concrete is the second most in-demand material on the planet after water, and this demand is only expected to grow. For these reasons, scientists have been seeking solutions to reduce emissions from concrete and cement production and use.
To carry out the study, the researchers looked at 10 different technologies that claim to effectively mineralise CO2 in cement. They found that only two of the technologies were effective and economical in reducing CO2 emissions from the cement production process.
For most technologies, there was poor or limited evidence that they can reduce CO2 emissions in real-life situations, despite companies claiming that they are effective.
They also found that economical CO2 mineralisation-based technologies were between two and five times less expensive than Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technologies, where carbon is captured and stored underground.
An added benefit of CO2 mineralisation is that it is a permanent solution that is relatively simple to manage. Construction materials can store CO2 for hundreds of years in infrastructure, and possibly longer when demolished materials are recycled.
Co-author Dr Justin D. Driver from the Department of Chemical Engineering said: “Although these findings are promising, it’s important to realise that CO2 mineralisation is not a silver bullet solution. There is a limitation on the amount of raw materials available that can absorb CO2, meaning the potential for the technology to reduce emissions across all sectors is also limited.”
Reducing the carbon footprint of cement
The research team, which also includes researchers from the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (EMPA) and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL), highlight some important focus areas for policymakers, investors, researchers, and other stakeholders as they seek to reduce emissions from the cement sector:
- Developing policies that support the recycling of demolished concrete, which can then be used for CO2 mineralisation technologies, enhancing emissions reductions
- Targeting the CO2 mineralisation technologies that are shown to be competitive (spending effort on uncompetitive technologies may be counterproductive to addressing the urgent climate crisis)
- Being transparent about the competitiveness of these technologies, based on the costs to produce it, demand for the product, market share, and use-cases for it, and providing information and labelling that is easy to understand and allows investors to compare across technologies
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