Key Points
Why Cement Produces So Much CO2

Cement manufacturing emits CO2 from two main sources. About 60% of the emissions arise from calcination, the chemical process in which limestone (CaCO₃) is heated to produce lime (CaO), releasing CO2.

 

The simplified chemical reaction is:

cement co2

Calcination in cement manufacturing involves heating limestone to produce lime (CaO), with CO2 as a by-product.
This reaction produces about 60% of CO2 emissions, while the remaining 40% arises from burning coal to achieve the high temperatures required.

This reaction is a fundamental part of cement production and generates process emissions—emissions that occur regardless of the energy source.

The remaining emissions come from the combustion of fuels—typically coal, petcoke, or natural gas—used to heat kilns to around 1450°C. These are known as combustion emissions. While these can be reduced by using alternative fuels or renewable energy, process emissions remain a persistent challenge.

Strategies for Greener Concrete and Cement

Reducing the environmental footprint of concrete involves strategies targeting both its key ingredient—cement—and the concrete mix as a whole.

Strategies for greener concrete include:

Strategies for greener cement focus on reducing the emissions associated with producing clinker and using alternative materials:

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How Carbon Capture Fits In

Because calcination emissions are intrinsic to clinker production, carbon capture is one of the few viable options for addressing them. By capturing CO2 from the flue gas before it enters the atmosphere, and then either storing it (CCS) or reusing it (CCU), producers can mitigate the climate impact.

Post-combustion capture, the most widely used method, involves absorbing CO2 from kiln exhaust gases using a chemical solvent. The gas is later separated, compressed, and either stored or repurposed. This method can be retrofitted to existing plants.

Alternative approaches include oxy-fuel combustion, where pure oxygen replaces air in the combustion process. This produces a flue gas that is mostly CO2 and water vapour, simplifying CO2 separation.

Emerging Projects and Demonstrations

Pilot and commercial-scale projects are testing carbon capture in cement production.

Several projects are underway, demonstrating the growing interest in and feasibility of implementing carbon capture technologies in the cement industry:

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Challenges to Scaling Up

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) could play a big role in cutting emissions from cement production—but putting it into practice overcoming many hurdles, from high costs to missing infrastructure. Some of the main challenges include:

 

 

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