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Green Moves

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World over, the cement industry is moving towards less carbon-intensive fuels, developing clinker substitutions, employing other low carbon materials with cementitious properties, and new low-carbon and carbon-reducing cement formulations and production processes in an effort to bring down the carbon footprint. Despite the incremental improvements in process efficiency-that have been adopted by the cement industry in recent years-the rate of increase in emissions continues almost unabated, (OPC production is [still] responsible for around six per cent of all man-made global carbon emissions where only around half of the world´s OPC is used to make around 11 billion metric tonnes of concrete annually). The Cement Sustainability Initiative, developed by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), has brought together major cement producers from across the world, and in India too. Today, Indian cement industry is probably one of the most energy efficient industries, thanks to the remarkable efforts by the Government of India under the aegis of the Bureau of Energy Efficiency. The industry has initiated the Performance-Achieve-Trade concept in a bid to bring down the energy consumption. However, in terms of reducing the carbon footprint-through the use of alternative fuels, reducing the clinker factor by the use of supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) such as fly ash, rice husk, etc., and artificial pozzolans by the use of recovered mineral components (RMCs) such as by-products of the iron and steel industries-there is much to be desired. The government needs to come up with new incentive schemes for R&D and strengthen the existing facilities. Without doubt, they also need to create new facilities to leverage the advancements happening elsewhere in the globe. Worldwide, R&D focuses more on lime-based cement like calcium sulfoaluminate cement, calcium aluminate and calcium alumina-silicate cement using bauxite, instead of the typical calcium silicates found in clays, super-sulfated cement (made by grinding a mixture of 80-85 per cent selected GBFS with 10-15 per cent calcium sulfate and about 5 per cent of Portland cement clinker), magnesium-oxide-based cement, alkali-activated cement/geopolymers, sequestrated carbon cement, etc.

From the market perspective, the recent merger of Holcim and Lafarge is sure to change the dynamics of the industry. On a positive note, both the majors have very strong R&D set up and have been instrumental in developing alternative cement formulations and production processes, globally. With a major vision of green and sustainable development and with a wide array of products, rather than just ´cement´, on a long term, the merger should bring in more value-added products and services.

On the other hand, UltraTech Cement, one of the biggest manufacturers of cement in India, is on a consolidation drive, and as per reports, the company is in a good position to buy the local assets that maybe put on the block by Holcim and Lafarge SA. This will not only bolster the market share but also is expected to bring a balance into market.

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Concrete

Cement industry to gain from new infrastructure spending

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As per a news report, Karan Adani, ACC Chair, has said that he expects the cement industry to benefit from the an anticipated US$2.2tn in new public infrastructure spending between 2025 and 2030. In a statement he said that ACC has crossed the 100Mt/yr cement capacity milestone in April 2025, propelling the company to get closer to its ambitious 140Mt/yr target by the 2028 financial year. The company’s capacity corresponds to 15 per cent of an all-India installed capacity of 686Mt/yr.

Image source:https://cementplantsupplier.com/cement-manufacturing/emerging-trends-in-cement-manufacturing-technology/

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Concrete

AI boom drives demand, says ACA

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The American Cement Association projects a nearly 1Mt annual increase in US cement demand over the next three years, driven by the surge in AI data centres. Consumption by data centres is expected to grow from 247,000 tonnes in 2025 to 860,000 tonnes by 2027. With over 5,400 AI data centres currently operating and numbers forecast to exceed 6,000 by 2027, the association cautions that regulatory hurdles and labour shortages may impact the industry’s ability to meet demand.

Image source:https://img-s-msn-com.akamaized.net/tenant/amp/entityid/AA1zOrih.img?w=2000&h=1362&m=4&q=79

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Concrete

GoldCrest Cement to build plant in India

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GoldCrest Cement will build a greenfield integrated plant with a 3.5Mt/yr clinker capacity and 4.5Mt/yr cement capacity. GoldCrest Cement appointed Humboldt Wedag India as engineering, procurement and construction contractor in March 2025 and targets completion by March 2027. It has signed a 40-year supply agreement with Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation for 150Mt of limestone from its upcoming Lakhpat Punrajpur mine in Gujarat.

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