HeidelbergCement researching full-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) in Canada
HeidelbergCement’s North American subsidiary Lehigh Cement and the International CCS Knowledge Centre1 announced a feasibility study of a full-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) project as a definitive solution to cut greenhouse gas emissions in Canada.
The study targets the feasibility to capture the majority of the CO2 from the flue gas of the Edmonton, Alberta, cement plant, thereby significantly reducing the greenhouse gas emissions from cement production. The study will encompass engineering designs, cost estimation, and a fulsome business case analysis. Emissions Reduction Alberta (ERA)2 is supporting the initiative with CAD 1.4 million (around € 960 000).
“This is a North American first in the cement industry to examine the feasibility of full-scale CCS as a definitive solution to cut greenhouse gas emissions,” says Dr. Bernd Scheifele, Chairman of the Managing Board of HeidelbergCement. “A 90-95 % CO2 capture rate is targeted at our Edmonton cement plant. The project is another important milestone on our path to become carbon neutral in concrete by latest 2050.”
On 05.09.2019, HeidelbergCement and the state-owned Norwegian energy group Equinor signed a memorandum of understanding on CCS of CO2 of the company’s Norcem cement plant in Brevik/Norway.
HeidelbergCement is set to reduce its specific net CO2 emissions per tonne of cement by 30 % compared to 1990 levels by 2030. This target has been approved by the Science Based Target initiative (SBTi) and is in line with the goals of the Paris Agreement, making Heidelberg-Cement the first cement company worldwide to have approved science-based CO2 reduction targets. HeidelbergCement will realise its vision of carbon neutral concrete – at the latest – by 2050.
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