A critical review of the decarbonisation potential in the U.K. cement industry

Date published

2025-01-10

Free to read from

2025-01-23

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MDPI

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Article

ISSN

1996-1944

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Citation

Sherif Z, Sarfraz S, Jolly M, Salonitis K (2025) A critical review of the decarbonisation potential in the U.K. cement industry. Materials, Volume 18, Issue 2, January 2025, Article number 292

Abstract

As urbanisation and infrastructure development continue to drive rising cement demand, the imperative to significantly reduce emissions from this emissions-intensive sector has become increasingly urgent, especially in the context of global climate goals such as achieving net zero emissions by 2050. This review examines the status, challenges and prospects of low-carbon cement technologies and mitigation strategies through the lens of the U.K. cement industry. A mixed-methods approach was employed, combining structured literature searches across academic databases with analyses of industry reports, market data and technological roadmaps to ensure a comprehensive evaluation. Following an outline of cement production, resource flows and the sector’s landscape in the U.K., the review delves into an array of decarbonisation pathways. This includes deploying the best available technologies (BATs), fuel switching, carbon capture utilisation and storage (CCUS), clinker substitution and low-carbon cement formulations. A critical assessment is provided on the technological readiness, costs, resource availability considerations and scalability aspects governing the widespread implementation prospects of these approaches within the U.K. cement industry. Furthermore, this study proposes a roadmap that considers priority avenues and policy needs essential for facilitating the transition towards sustainable cement production aligned with the U.K.’s net zero obligations by 2050. This evaluation contributes significantly to the ongoing decarbonisation discourse by holistically mapping technological solutions and strategic imperatives tailored to the unique challenges and opportunities presented by the U.K. cement sector.

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Github

Keywords

4005 Civil Engineering, 40 Engineering, 13 Climate Action, 12 Responsible Consumption and Production, 34 Chemical sciences, 40 Engineering, green cement, cementitious materials, CO2 emissions, energy, decarbonisation, U.K. cement industry

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Attribution 4.0 International

Funder/s

This research was funded by Transforming Foundation Industries Research and Innovation Hub (TransFIRe), grant number EP/V054627/1.

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