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Kyrgyzstan reports growth in cement production 17 October 2024
Kyrgyzstan: Cement production in Kyrgyzstan reached 2.06Mt between January and August 2024, marking a 2% increase from 2.02Mt during the same period of 2023. 375,000t of cement was produced in August 2024, marking an 18.7% increase compared to August 2023.
New developments in alternative cement
Written by Jacob Winskell
16 October 2024
One unusual thing about coverage of cement in the media is the way that discussions often centre precisely on its absence – that is, on alternatives to cement. These alternatives boast unique chemistries and performance characteristics, but are all produced without Portland cement clinker. They are generally called ‘alternative cements,’ perhaps because ‘cement-free cement’ does not have such a commercially viable ring to it. This contradictory tendency reached a new high in the past week, with developments in alternative cement across Asia, Europe, the Middle East and North America. Together, they hint at a more diverse future for the ‘cement’ industry than the one we know today.
Asia
In Indonesia, Suvo Strategic Minerals has concluded tests with Makassar State University of a novel nickel-slag-based cement. Huadi Nickel-Alloy Indonesia supplied raw materials, and tests showed a seven-day compressive strength of 37.5MPa. Suvo Strategic Minerals says that a partnership with Huadi Nickel-Alloy Indonesia for commercial production is a likely next step.
Europe
Cement producer Mannok and minerals company Boliden partnered with the South Eastern Applied Materials (SEAM) research centre in Ireland to launch a project to develop supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) from shale on 7 October 2024. The project will additionally investigate CO2-curing of cement paste backfill for use in mines. Irish state-owned global commerce agency Enterprise Ireland has contributed €700,000 in funding.
UK-based SCM developer Karbonite expects to launch trial production of its olivine-based SCM with a concrete company in 2025. The start-up launched Karbonite Group Holding BV, with offices in the Netherlands, to facilitate this new phase. Karbonite’s SCM is activated at 750 – 850°C and sequesters CO2 in the activation process, resulting in over 56% lower CO2 emissions than ordinary Portland cement (OPC). Managing director Rajeev Sood told Global Cement that talks are already underway for subsequent expansions into the UAE and India.
Back in the UK, contractor John Sisk & Son has received €597,000 from national innovation agency Innovate UK. John Sisk & Son is testing fellow Ireland-based company Ecocem’s <25% clinker cement technology in concrete for use in its on-going construction of the Wembley Park mixed development in London.
At the same time, Innovate UK granted a further €3.23m to other companies for concrete decarbonisation. Recipients included a calcined clay being developed by Cemcor, an SCM being developed from electric arc furnace byproducts by Cocoon, a geopolymer cement technology being developed by EFC Green Concrete Technology UK and an initiative to develop alternative cement from recycled concrete fines at the Materials Processing Institute in Middlesbrough. Also included was the Skanska Costain Strabag joint venture, which is working on the London stretch of the upcoming HS2 railway. The joint venture, along with partners including cement producer Tarmac and construction chemicals company Sika UK, will test low-kaolinite London clay as a raw material with which to produce calcined clay as a cement substitute in concrete structures in HS2’s rail tunnels.
Middle East
Talks are underway between UK-based calcined clay producer Next Generation SCM and City Cement subsidiary Nizak Mining Company over the possible launch of a joint venture in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The joint venture would build a 350,000t/yr reduced-CO2 concrete plant, which would use alternative cement based on Next Generation SCM’s calcined clay.
North America
Texas-based SCM developer Solidia Technologies recently patented its carbonatable calcium silicate-based alternative cement, which sequesters CO2 as it cures.
Meanwhile, C-Crete Technologies made its first commercial pour of its granite-based cement-free concrete in New York, US. C-Crete Technologies says that the product offers cost and performance parity with conventional cement, with net zero CO2 emissions. Its raw material is globally more abundant than the limestone used as a raw material for clinker. Other abundantly available feedstocks successfully deployed within C-Crete Technologies’ repertoire include basalt and zeolite.
Across New York State, in Binghamton, KLAW Industries has succeeded in replacing 20% of concrete’s cement content with its powdered glass-based SCM, Pantheon. KLAW Industries has delivered samples to local municipalities and the New York State Department of Transportation. Its success expands the discussion of possible circular cement ingredients from the industrial sphere into post-consumer resources.
In Calgary, Canada, a novel SCM has drawn attention from one of the major cement incumbents: Germany-based Heidelberg Materials. It invested in local construction and demolition materials (CDM)-based SCM developer EnviCore on 9 October 2024. The companies plan to build a pilot plant at an existing Heidelberg Materials CDM recycling centre.
Conclusion
Alternative cement developers are still finding the words to talk about their products. They may be more than ‘supplementary’ up to the point of entirely supplanting 100% of clinker. Product webpages offer ‘hydraulic binder,’ ‘pozzolan’ and even ‘cement.’ As alternative ‘cements’ are developed, they build on the work of pioneers like Joseph Aspdin and Louis Vicat. Start-ups and their backers are now reaching commercial offerings, on a similar-but-different footing to cement itself. None of these novel materials positions itself as the sole, last-minute ‘super sub’ in the construction sector’s confrontation with climate change. Rather, they are a package of solutions which can combine into a net zero-emissions heavy building materials offering, hopefully before 2050.
Related to this is the need for ‘technology neutral’ standards, as championed this week by the Alliance for Low-Carbon Cement and Concrete (ALCCC), along with 23 other European industry associations, civil society organisations and think tanks. The term may sound new, but the concept is critical to the eventual uptake of alternative cements: standards, the ALCCC says, should be purely performance-based. They ought not attempt to define what technology, for example cement clinker, makes a suitable building material. According to the ALCCC, Europe’s building materials standards are not technology neutral, but instead ‘gatekeep’ market access, to the benefit of conventional cement and the exclusion of ‘proven and scalable low-carbon products.’
At the same time, cement itself is changing. Market research from USD Analytics showed an anticipated 5% composite annual growth rate in blended cement sales between 2024 and 2032, more than doubling throughout the period from US$253bn to US$369bn. If you can’t beat it, blend with it!
- Alternative raw materials
- Analysis
- supplementary cementitious materials
- Calcium silicate cement
- binder
- pozzolan
- CO2
- Sustainability
- Canada
- Ireland
- Netherlands
- India
- UAE
- UK
- US
- Solidia Technologies
- City Cement
- Nizak Mining Company
- Innovation UK
- Next Generation SCM
- John Sisk & Son
- Ecocem
- Cemcor
- Cocoon
- EFC Green Concrete Technology UK
- Materials Processing Institute
- Finance
- funding
- Government
- Grant
- circular economy
- recycled concrete paste
- construction and demolition materials
- fines
- geopolymer cement
- electric arc furnace
- Slag
- Skanska Costain Strabag
- Tarmac
- Sika
- Sika UK
- Rail
- Calcined Clay
- kaolin
- olivine
- Karbonite UK
- Karbonite Group Holding
- Mannok
- Boliden
- South Eastern Applied Materials
- Indonesia
- Suvo Strategic Minerals
- Makassar State University
- Huadi NickelAlloy Indonesia
- startup
- Trial
- testing
- Mining
- cement paste backfill
- curing
- carbon sequestration
- carbon sink
- Saudi Arabia
- Texas
- New York
- CCrete Technologies
- performance
- net zero
- Clinker factor
- granite
- basalt
- Zeolite
- London clay
- Standards
- European Union
- Alliance for LowCarbon Cement & Concrete
- USD Analytics
- market
- Outlook
- Forecast
- Enterprise Ireland
- GCW681
Lucky Cement reappoints Muhammed Sohail Tabba as its chair
Written by Global Cement staff
16 October 2024
Pakistan: Lucky Cement has announced its reappointment of Muhammad Sohail Tabba to the role of chair of its board. The appointment will be effective through to 2027. Tabba has served in the role since 1993. He currently holds other executive positions in the textiles and energy sectors, at Gadoon Textile Mills, Lucky Textile Mills and Yunus Energy.
Meanwhile, Muhammad Ali Tabba will also continue to occupy the position of CEO through to 2027. He was first appointed to the role in 2005.
Suleiman Abdulaziz Al-Zaben resigns chair of Al Jouf Cement’s audit committee
Written by Global Cement staff
16 October 2024
Saudi Arabia: Al Jouf Cement Company’s board of directors has accepted the resignation of Suleiman Abdulaziz Al-Zaben as chair of its audit committee. Al-Zaben had been serving as committee member from outside the board.
In July 2024, Al Jouf Cement Company took legal action against unnamed former board members, following an investigation into possible ‘administrative irregularities’ by an independent auditor launched in December 2023.
Huaxin Cement to build new plant in Zimbabwe 16 October 2024
Zimbabwe: Huaxin Cement has invested US$15m in a new manufacturing plant in Zimbabwe, according to Bulawayo 24 News. The company has set up a subsidiary Huaxin Zimbabwe, to oversee operations. Huaxin Zimbabwe director Clemence Gomba said that the initial capacity will be 300,000t/yr, potentially increasing to 1Mt/yr if lime reserves are accessed, adding that he wanted “Zimbabweans to get cement at their doorsteps.” The plant will serve both local and export markets. Huaxin plans to employ five Chinese nationals and 200 local people.
Company CEO Mr Chen said “We started construction of the site last month [September 2024] and we hope to finish by the end of November 2024. In December 2024, we will start the production of cement. The plant will start with a production capacity of 25,000t/month of cement, we will mainly be manufacturing 32.5 and 42.5 cement. We hope to satisfy the local market so that we can reduce our imports. We hope to find some limestone reserves so that we will not be importing any clinker.”
Industry and Commerce Minister Mangaliso Ndlovu toured the site, saying that Zimbabwe is experiencing a surge in imports mainly from Zambia and South Africa, a reflection that local production is ‘not satisfying’ the market.