Concrete
Future Potential Materials
Published
2 years agoon
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Asok Kr. Dikshit, Richa Mazumder, Sanjeev Kr. Chaturvedi and Lok Pratap Singh, National Council for Cement and Building Materials (NCCBM), discuss the themes of sustainable development in India’s cement sector, as the second piece from a three-part series.
It has been established by several researchers that different types of wastes/by-products of other industries can be utilised as alternative fuels and raw materials for cement production. Moreover, the circular economy is also supported by the production of blended cements, composite cements and utilising performance improvers (PI) (Kukreja et al. 2020). Portland Pozzolana Cement (PPC) and Portland Slag Cement (PSC), which uses fly ash and granulated blast furnace slag (GBFS) in the production of blended cements are not only beneficial for conservation of natural resources but also in lowering clinker factor in cement and reduction of CO2 emissions along with environmental sustainability. Moreover, various clays and LD slag are also in the lab scale R&D interfacial stage for application in the cement sector as raw materials.
Fly-ash
Fly ash is a by-product of burning pulverised coal in a coal-fuelled power plant. In particular, it is the unburned residue collected by either mechanical or electrostatic separators that is carried away from the burning zone in the boiler by the flue gases. The heavier unburned material drops to the bottom of the furnace and is termed bottom ash. Fly ash is a pozzolanic material consisting of finely-divided amorphous alumino-silicate with varying amounts of calcium. This when mixed with portland cement and water, will react with the calcium hydroxide released by the hydration of portland cement to produce various calcium-silicate hydrates (C-S-H) and calcium-aluminate hydrates. Technical assessment of fly ash is determined by physical and chemical characteristics which meet certain requirements.
The mineralogy and composition of fly ash is not constant and depends upon rather parent coal source, operating parameters and temperature of TPPs, the extent of coal preparation and cleaning, furnace design, usual climate storage and handling. The crystalline phases of the fly ash are determined by the mineralogical properties. Generally, fly ash has silica 40-60 per cent, alumina 20-40 per cent and ferrous 5–15 per cent by weight fractions (Singh et al. 2018). It mostly consists of mullite, quartz, magnetite, hematite and calcite as the common crystalline minerals (Šešlija et al. 2016). Fly ash is categorised into two classes – class F and class C, based on mineral composition and sources of coal.

Backfilling in the zinc lead mines.
In a few cement plants, fly ash is used as a raw mix component but, in most cases, fly ash is added to cement to produce Portland Pozzolana cement (PPC). Fly ash utilisation in the cement and construction industries can lower GHG emissions because such use offsets the emissions that result from mining activities and CO2 generation during cement production. Fly ash can decrease a higher percentage of the consumption of cement during construction. Out of the total fly ash generation, around 25 per cent is being utilised for cement industry (http://www.cea.nic.in/reports/others/thermal/tcd/flyash_201617.pdf). 33 per cent around still remains unutilised due to Geographical imbalanced and limitation of maximum 35 per cent fly ash, in PPC, as per IS:1489 (Part-I) (http://www.cea.nic.in/reports/others/thermal/tcd/flyash_201617.pdf).
In NCB various R&D work has been done on fly ash, some of which has been discussed below:
Evaluation of high-volume fly ash cements
The Indian standard specification IS: 1489 (Pt.I)-2015 for Portland Pozzolana Cement (PPC) permits 35 per cent (max) fly ash addition in PPC. In view of enhancing the use of fly ash in PPC in order to achieve resource conservation and environmental sustainability, NCB has taken up studies on preparation and evaluation of high volume fly ash cements (HVFAC) in line with European standard EN-197-1. Different approaches have been adopted to achieve desired strength development and other physical characteristics of HVFAC using fly ash and clinker materials available in different parts of India. Investigations have been carried out on performance evaluation of High-Volume Fly Ash Cement (HVFAC) up to 50 percent fly ash prepared by inter-grinding as well as separate grinding and blending of all the constituents. A similar strength development pattern was observed in the cement samples prepared with increasing percentage of fly ash with clinkers of different alite contents and maintaining same fineness level by inter-grinding as well as separate grinding and blending (Fig 5.). The effect of fineness levels was found to be more pronounced of HVFAC prepared with the clinker having higher alite.
Development of PPC based on fly ash and limestone
In this study, Portland composite cement blends were prepared (140 nos) with four types of clinker from different regions of India along with the regional available fly ash (15-35 per cent) and limestone (5, 7 and 10 per cent). The results depicted that the clinker quality plays an important role on performance of limestone and fly ash based composite cements. The mortar studies indicated Portland composite cements based on limestone and fly ash with 35 per cent replacement of clinker by fly ash and limestone (keeping limestone content upto 7 per cent in it). Hydration studies showed Monocarboaluminate (Ca4Al2O6 • CO3 • 11H2O) was found in the samples containing FA and LS, and the intensity of these peaks tend to be stronger when the amount of limestone is increased. Draft code formulation for submission to BIS is underway.
Development cement backfills pastes (CBP) using ultra-fine fly-ash and its evaluation
NCB has taken up several projects with Hindustan Zinc Limited in cement-based backfilling material/paste development. The target is for an application of the CBP as a cost-effective alternative to existing backfilling industrial solutions. Assimilation of fly-ash-an industrial waste: generated from a thermal power station along with other wastes generated from mining industries to produce CBP having the desired requirement, as per standing regulation, not only yields financial benefits of reduced consumption of cement whereby reducing carbon footprint; also, it allows utilisation of industrial waste whereby reducing the portion of material channelled to landfills. In the title project, the utiliSation of the ultra-fine fly ash for the preparation of CBP was studied at NCB, Ballabgarh. Based on the studies, NCB made a recommendation to HZL and is under consideration by the company. The studies’ results have
effectively achieved the target and are subject to application mine backfilling at SKE mines,
Udaipur, Rajasthan, India.
Investigations on utilisation of coarse fly ash (200-250 m2/kg)
Generation of fly ash in India is about 226 mtpa, out of which 26 per cent is being utilised in the cement industry. BIS allows fly ash of fineness above 250 m2/kg to be utilised for cement manufacturing. This investigation was carried out in NCB to study utilisation of coarser fly ash (200-250) in cement manufacture and to establish its technical suitability Investigations were carried out with fly ashes having the fineness below the specified BIS limit (250 m2/kg). The studies depicted that the coarser fly ash samples are meeting the mandatory requirements of IS 3812:2013, after grinding to 320±10 m2/kg. Studies on field wise samples indicated that the fineness is lower than 250 m2/kg at initial fields. However, grinding of these samples to 320±10 m2/kg resulted in improved characteristics conforming to IS 3812:2013.
Improving the reactivity of fly ash
The study carried out in NCB investigates the effect of mineral matter doping in the coal before combustion on its chemico-mineralogical constituents of the resultant ash. Different types of sintering aids were mixed with coal of different percentages. The ash prepared of the designed coal and dopants mixes in laboratory furnace at around 950°C. The resultant ash with and without dopants were evaluated for their chemico-mineralogy and microstructure characterisation using state of art instruments such as XRD, SEM and Optical Microscopy The mineralogical or crystalline compositions and glass content of doped ash samples shows better characteristics than the un doped sample. The addition of sintering aids may convert the crystalline content of silicate minerals into amorphous content and enhance the total amorphous content in the doped ash samples. Lime reactivity, and cement reactivity of doped ash samples shows better performance than the control sample.
Improving the properties of fly ash at higher fineness through mechanical activation
Fly ash has been established as the most sought-after material in cement, construction, and related building materials Industry. Enhancing the fly ash utiliSation in the manufacture of cement is identified as one of the key areas to mitigate the GreenHouse Gas emissions from cement industry. Owing to the poor reactivity of Indian fly ash, the cement industry is generally using activation methods to improve the properties of fly ash for enhanced use as a blending component in cement manufacturing. Among different methods of activation, mechanical activation is the most economic and effective way for improving the fly ash properties. Grinding of fly ash alone or along with clinker to the required fineness is a common practice in cement industry. Though increasing the fly ash content in cement has economic and environmental benefits, it results in decrease in the compressive strength values particularly at early ages.

Ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS)
In NCB, investigations were carried out on the mechanical activation of fly ash to the very high fineness values to see the effect of use of high fine fly ash on the properties of resultant cement. Though the physical properties and glass content values of the fly ash were found to be improving with the fineness, after a certain fineness some properties of fly ash such as lime reactivity (L.R.) and comparative compressive strength (C.C.S.) were found to be decreasing. Change in the microstructure of fly ash with increasing the fineness of fly ash was identified as the primary reason that is affecting the L.R. and C.R. values. Besides, increasing the fineness of clinker was found to be more beneficial than increasing the fineness of fly ash to absorb more fly ash in the cement manufacturing.
Blast furnace Slag is formed when iron ore, coke, and limestone or dolomite are heated at high temperatures. During this process, the limestone/dolomite acts as a flux and is chemically combined with the silicates and aluminates present in ore. Coke ash and the above products are mixed and produce blast furnace slag. This molten product can be cooled in several ways to form various types of slag, including ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS), which is rapidly cooled with large quantities of water to produce granules. GGBS is mixed with Portland cement clinker to make a blended cement known as Portland slag cement. Various phases are present in the slag including glass (supercooled liquid silicates), semi-glass, quartz, Ca-rich silicates, aluminosilicates, the presence of modified C3S and C2S phases, and in melilite, gehlenite, akermanite, merwinite, rankinite, pseudo wollastonite, monticellite, anorthite, forsterite, perovskite, spinel, etc. in minor amounts (Yildirim and Prezzi 2011). Currently India produced approx. 25 million tonnes BFS out of which 22 million tonnes of BFS is granulated and being consumed entirely in cement industry (Agarwal et al. 2017).

Steel slag and Cu slags are also used in cement manufacturing. In these types of slags, the morphometric complexity in the glass is typical, and semi-glass grains may behave as mineralisers. There is a direct effect of this slag on the formation of belite grains. However, these slags reduce the size of grains of both C3S and C2S if the pyro-processing system is disturbed. Steel slag can potentially replace conventional raw materials for clinker production owing to its relatively high content of oxides, such as CaO and Fe2O3. Additionally using steel slag as the raw material helps in the conservation of natural resources. Copper slag has a high Fe content and has been used as an iron adjustment material during the cement clinker production. Since the main composition of copper slag is vitreous FeSiO3, it has low melting point and could reduce the calcination temperature for cement clinker. Thus, the use of copper slag to replace iron powder as iron adjusting materials facilitates cement production, reduces or eliminates the need of mineraliser.
Some of the studies carried out in NCB on steel slag has been discussed below:
Utilisation of Granulated LD Converter Slag
Investigations were carried out in NCB to study the utilisation of granulated LD slag in the manufacture of cement and replacement of natural sand in cement mortars. The investigations revealed that LD slag could be gainfully utilised up to 5 per cent as performance improver in cement manufacture. The results indicated that compressive strength at 28-days improved up to 3.5 per cent as compared to that of control OPC without affecting the other parameters such as water requirement, setting time and soundness. Further, LD slag up to 40 per cent by weight could be added during the clinker grinding stage to manufacture cement blends. The compressive strength was found comparable to control OPC and PSC containing granulated BF slag. The investigations on use of LD slag as raw materials up to 4.25 per cent by replacing iron bearing additives in the raw mix revealed that good quality clinker could be produced at 1400 °C. The investigations on use of LD slag as replacement of natural sand in cement mortar established that LD slag could be gainfully utilised up to 100 percent. The replacement of natural sand in cement mortar also showed improved performance characteristics.
Utilisation of ladle furnace slag as a raw mix component
Exploration studies of Ladle Furnace Slag (LDF slag), which was a waste product from the steel industry were carried out in NCB as a raw mix component in manufacture of clinker to replace the laterite/red mud. Chemical and mineralogical investigations of LDF slag showed the presence of Fe2O3 in the range of 3 to 34 per cent, Al2O3 in the range of 14 to 33 per cent, SiO2 in the range of 3 to 21 per cent and CaO in the range of 33-51 per cent and calcium silicate, calcium aluminate, iron containing minerals etc. Computed mix designs were performed to optimise the raw materials with the similar potential minerals percentage, liquid content, AM, SM in the resultant clinker. LDF slag designed optimum compositions with the replacement level of 0.5 to 1.5 of laterite/red mud showed similar characteristics in terms of burnability as well as setting time, compressive strength and other physical characteristics.
Utilisation of Pet Coke Gasification Slag
A by-product slag, provided by M/s Reliance Industries Ltd, generated during the process of gasification of pet coke was investigated in NCB for its utilisation in the manufacture of OPC. In addition to CaO, SiO2, Al2O3, Fe2O3 and MgO, the slag also contains about 4 per cent vanadium. Investigations were carried out on the use of this slag as raw mix component in manufacture of Portland clinker. The burnability of cement raw mixes designed using 1-5 per cent pet coke gasification slag showed its mineralising effect, which was manifested through better lime assimilation and development of clinker mineral phases along with microstructure. The slag sample was also investigated for its suitability as performance improver in manufacture of OPC. The glass content in the sample was found to be 54 per cent and thus did not meet the requirement of Indian standard IS: 12089-1987. The physical characteristics of resultant cement were found to be comparable to its counterpart prepared using 5 per cent BF slag at all the ages.
Red mud
It is a byproduct of the aluminium industry. It contains numerous in situ mineralisers, which help to enhance quick phase formation in the clinker. However, the phases’ forms are different in shape and size. Red mud also affects the morphology of phases, which is fragmentation of alite and belite, thereby increasing the granulometry of phases. Tsakiridis et al. (2004) by addition of red mud into the raw meals assessed the feasibility of producing Portland cement clinkers. They used raw mix composition having 3.5 per cent Bayer-process red mud blended with 74.8 per cent limestone, 11.4 per cent schist, 3 per cent bauxite and 7.3 per cent Milos sand to prepare Portland cement clinkers. This raw meal is sintered at 1450°C and the produced clinkers mixed with the gypsum (5 per cent) to form final cement. It was observed that the addition of red mud in the raw mix resulted in a well-burnt clinker with a free lime content of 1.94 per cent at 1450°C. The chemical composition of the produced clinker was close to that of OPC clinker, and the incorporation of red mud residue at 3.5 per cent did not affect the mineralogical composition of the Portland cement clinker.
Use of red mud in cement production produces significant environmental and economic benefits such as natural resource management, promoting circular economy, lowering contamination of soil and groundwater, reducing landfill volume, cutting waste disposal costs, and decreasing the production cost of cement (Liu and Zhang, 2011)
Lime Sludge
It is waste mainly produced from the paper industry, other sources are fertiliser, sugar, carbide and soda ash industries. Lime sludge (LS) is generated by a kraft process through the chemical recovery section in a paper mill. The chemical composition of LS samples contains major CaO (52-55) per cent, SiO2 (1-4) per cent, Al2O3 and Fe2O3 make up less than 1 per cent by weight. Minor alkalis of Na2O, K2O and SO3 content are less than 1 wt per cent which is permitted as per Indian standard. al. has undertaken a study in which the lime sludge addition improved the burning ability of clinker which in turn reduced the temperatures for calcium carbonate (CaCO3) decomposition and liquid phase formation (Wei et al. 2014). Raw mix designed to manufacture cement clinker by using lime sludge and other cementitious raw materials, which has C3S, C2S, C3A, C4AF as clinker phase composition (Dikshit and Sahoo 2022).

Red Mud
The industrial LS is having the potential to be utilised as feasible raw material for cement preparation by replacing the limestone. Lime sludge can be used in 30-40 per cent in place of limestone because free lime content is observed to be low in the clinkers. Mineralogically C3S and C2S content is lying in the desired range and alite belite grain size are 27-34 µm and 14-23 µm respectively. NCB has validated lime sludge waste from paper and pulp industry in the cement manufacture application, which can bring sustainable development towards the environment as well as circular economy.
Use of Jarosite
In NCB, a study on Jarosite, a residual by-product generated from zinc industry during hydrometallurgical process containing predominantly Fe2O3, SO3, alkalies with small amounts of ZnO has been carried out. The constituent oxides present are known to contribute significantly in formation of clinker mineral phases and therefore, the Jarosite could be an effective mineraliser and activator in the manufacture of OPC clinker. The present study highlights the effect of addition of 0.5-2.0 per cent of typical Jarosite in cement raw mixes prepared with different grade limestone samples along with other conventional raw materials. The clinker parameters such as LSF, SM and AM were maintained in the range of 0.92, 2.07-2.18 and 1.01-1.14 respectively. Burnability studies on raw mixes showed increase in the rate of lime assimilation and rapid formation of clinker mineral phases in presence of Jarosite. The mineral phase developments and micro-structures of laboratory clinkers fired at 1400±5°C were found to be adequate in presence of optimum dose of 1.5 per cent Jarosite and were comparable to control clinker (without Jarosite addition) prepared at 1450±5°C. The physical performance of Ordinary Portland Cement thus prepared from above mineralised clinker showed performance comparable to control cement. As the Jarosite contains heavy elements, a leaching study was carried out by immersing 28-days hardened neat cement cubes in 500 ml distilled water over a period of 24 months. The leachates such as barium, cadmium, cobalt, chromium, copper, manganese, zinc, lead and strontium were found to be in negligible amounts.

Dried Lime sludge
Use of Marble Waste
Studies were carried out in NCB on the suitability of marble dust/slurry for use in cement manufacture as raw mix, as performance improver in OPC and in making Portland Limestone Cement (PLC). Performance evaluation of Portland Limestone Cement (PLC) composites prepared by blending of 15-30 per cent marble dust/limestone with OPC showed comparable strength development. Similarly, Ordinary Portland Cement samples containing 5 per cent marble dust collected from different marble clusters of Rajasthan also showed performance comparable to OPC containing 5 per cent limestone and conforming to IS requirement of CaCO3 =75 per cent laid down for limestone to be used as performance improver in OPC.
Phosphogypsum
Phosphogypsum is generated as a by-product during the manufacture of phosphoric acid. Approximately 4.5-5.5 tonnes of phosphogypsum is generated per tonne of phosphoric acid produced using wet process. Apart from the yearly generation of phosphogypsum, there is an additional issue of legacy stock of unutilised phosphogypsum of about 64.65 mt at various fertiliser plants accumulated over the years. In the manufacturing process of cement, phosphogypsum could be used as a replacement of natural gypsum which plays the role of a set retarder. Therefore, a project was taken up in NCB on investigations on utilisation of phosphogypsum in cement manufacturing.
Phosphogypsum along with mineral gypsum and clinker from different sources were collected for this study and their chemical, mineralogical and thermal characterisations were carried out. OPC blends were prepared using phosphogypsum and evaluated for chemical and physical properties. Initial results were found to be very encouraging. Further investigation is underway.
Technical feasibility of using FGD gypsum
Globally, Flue Gas Desulfurisation (FGD) systems have been installed in many thermal power plants in developed countries and FGD plants have been in operation in the US for 40 years. In India also the standards set by the MoEFandCC for coal-based thermal power plants came into force by which FGD systems need to be installed in them. Accordingly, a R&D project on technical feasibility of using FGD gypsum in cement manufacture is taken up in NCB. In this project, FGD gypsum is obtained from thermal power plants and other raw materials from cement plants. The FGD is characterised for their chemico-mineralogical properties. Mineralogical characterisation has been done by XRD and DTA. It clearly shows the presence of the Gypsum. The differential thermal analysis (DTA) indicates two endothermic peaks at 140°C due to the conversion of dihydrate to hemihydrate and a small hump at around 167°C due to conversion of hemihydrate to anhydrite of gypsum. In addition, an exothermic peak was recorded at 481°C, corresponding to the phase transformation of a CaSO4 to ? CaSO4. Chemical properties of Cement with both mineral and FGD gypsum clearly shows identical properties as per Indian Standards. The physical properties of cement Cement with both mineral and FGD gypsum clearly show comparable properties for all the properties, including normal consistency, setting time, and soundness. Furthermore, the compressive strength (CS) at 1D, 3D, 7D and 28 days for all samples with FGD gypsum shows similar performance compared to the control sample with mineral gypsum.
*The Authors wish to acknowledge the Director General of National Council for Cement and Building Materials (NCB) for giving permission for publication and DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, GOI, through various R&D projects support financial
for sustainable development of cement Industry. The Authors also acknowledge all scientific and technical staff of NCB for cooperation through R&D work for sustainability of cement industry related projects.
**List of references will be featured in the concluding part of the series.
Concrete
Merlin Prime Spaces Acquires 13,185 Sq M Land Parcel In Pune
Rs 273 crore purchase broadens the developer’s Pune presence
Published
3 days agoon
March 6, 2026By
admin
Merlin Prime Spaces (MPS) has acquired a 13,185 sq m land parcel in Pune for Rs 273 crore, marking a notable expansion of its footprint in the city.
The transaction value converts to Rs 2,730 mn or Rs 2.73 bn.
The parcel is located in a strategic area of Pune and the firm described the acquisition as aligned with its growth objectives.
The deal follows recent activity in the region and will be watched by investors and developers.
MPS said the acquisition will support its planned development pipeline and enable delivery of commercial and residential space to meet local demand.
The company expects the site to provide flexibility in product design and phased development to respond to market conditions.
The move reflects an emphasis on land ownership in key suburban markets.
The emphasis on land acquisition reflects a strategy to secure inventory ahead of demand cycles.
The purchase follows a period of sustained investor interest in Pune real estate, driven by expanding office ecosystems and residential demand from professionals.
MPS will integrate the new holding into its existing portfolio and plans to engage with local authorities and stakeholders to progress approvals and infrastructure readiness.
No financial partners were disclosed in the announcement.
The firm indicated that timelines will depend on approvals and prevailing market conditions.
Analysts note that strategic land acquisitions at scale can help developers manage costs and timelines while preserving optionality for future projects.
MPS will now hold an enlarged land bank in the region as it pursues growth, and the acquisition underlines continued corporate appetite for measured expansion in second tier cities.
The company intends to move forward with detailed planning in the coming months.
Stakeholders will assess how the site is positioned relative to existing infrastructure and connectivity.
Concrete
Adani Cement and Naredco Partner to Promote Sustainable Construction
Collaboration to focus on skills, technology and greener practices
Published
3 days agoon
March 6, 2026By
admin
Adani Cement has entered a strategic partnership with the National Real Estate Development Council (Naredco) to support India’s construction needs with a focus on sustainability, workforce capability and modern building technologies. The collaboration brings together Adani Cement’s building materials portfolio, research and development strengths and technical expertise with Naredco’s nationwide network of more than 15,000 member organisations. The agreement aims to address evolving demand across housing, commercial and infrastructure sectors.
Under the partnership, the organisations will roll out skill development and certification programmes for masons, contractors and site supervisors, with training to emphasise contemporary construction techniques, safety practices and quality standards. The programmes are intended to improve project execution and on-site efficiency and to raise labour productivity through standardised competencies. Emphasis will be placed on practical training and certification pathways that can be scaled across regions.
The alliance will function as a platform for knowledge sharing and technology exchange, facilitating access to advanced concrete solutions, innovative construction practices and modern materials. The effort is intended to enhance structural durability, execution quality and environmental responsibility across developments while promoting adoption of low-carbon technologies and green cement alternatives. Companies expect these measures to contribute to longer term resilience of built assets.
Senior executives conveyed that the partnership reflects a shared commitment to strengthening quality and sustainability in construction and that closer engagement with developers will help integrate advanced materials and technical support throughout the project lifecycle. Leadership noted the need for responsible construction practices as urbanisation accelerates and indicated that the association should encourage wider adoption of green building norms and collaboration within the real estate and construction ecosystem.
The organisations said they will also explore integrated building solutions, including ready-mix concrete offerings, while supporting initiatives aligned with affordable and inclusive housing. The partnership will progress through engagements, conferences and joint training programmes targeting rapidly urbanising cities and growth centres where demand for efficient and environmentally responsible construction grows. Naredco, established under the aegis of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, will leverage its policy and advocacy role to support implementation.
Operational excellence in cement is no longer about producing more—it is about producing smarter, cleaner and more reliably, where cost per tonne meets carbon per tonne.
Operational excellence in cement has moved far beyond the old pursuit of ‘more tonne’. The new benchmark is smarter, cleaner, more reliable production—delivered with discipline across process, people and data. In an industry where energy can account for nearly 30 per cent of manufacturing cost, even marginal gains translate into meaningful value. As Dr SB Hegde, Professor, Jain College of Engineering & Technology, Hubli and Visiting Professor, Pennsylvania State University, USA, puts it, “Operational excellence… is no longer about producing more. It is about producing smarter, cleaner, more reliably, and more sustainably.” The shift is structural: carbon per tonne will increasingly matter as much as cost per tonne, and competitiveness will be defined by the ability to stabilise operations while steadily lowering emissions.
From control rooms to command centres
The modern cement plant is no longer a handful of loops watched by a few operators. Control rooms have evolved from a few hundred signals to thousands—today, up to 25,000 signals can compete for attention. Dr Rizwan Sabjan, Head – Global Sales and Proposals, Process Control and Optimization, Fuller Technologies, frames the core problem plainly: plants have added WHRS circuits, alternative fuels, higher line capacities and tighter quality expectations, but human attention remains finite. “It is very impossible for an operator to operate the plant with so many things being added,” he says. “We need somebody who can operate 24×7… without any tiredness, without any distraction… The software can do that for us better.”
This is where advanced process control shifts from ‘automation spend’ to a financial lever. Dr Hegde underlines the logic: “Automation is not a technology expense. It is a financial strategy.” In large kilns, a one per cent improvement is not incremental—it is compounding.
Stability is the new productivity
At the heart of operational excellence lies stability. Not because stability is comfortable, but because it is profitable—and increasingly, low-carbon. When setpoints drift and operators chase variability, costs hide in refractory damage, thermal shocks, stop-start losses and quality swings. Dr Sabjan argues that algorithmic control can absorb process disturbances faster than any operator, acting as ‘a co-pilot or an autopilot’, making changes ‘as quick as possible’ rather than waiting for manual intervention. The result is not just fuel saving—it is steadier operation that extends refractory life and reduces avoidable downtime.
The pay-off can be seen through the lens of variability: manual operation often amplifies swings, while closed-loop optimisation tightens control. As Dr Sabjan notes, “It’s not only about savings… there are many indirect benefits, like increasing the refractory life, because we are avoiding the thermal shocks.”
Quality control
If stability is the base, quality is the multiplier. A high-capacity plant can dispatch enormous volumes daily, and quality cannot be a periodic check—it must be continuous. Yet, as Dr Sabjan points out, the biggest error is not in analysis equipment but upstream: “80 per cent of the error is happening at the sampling level.” If sampling is inconsistent, even the best XRF and XRD become expensive spectators.
Automation closes the loop by standardising sample collection, transport, preparation, analysis and corrective action. “We do invest a lot of money on analytical equipment like XRD and XRF, but if it is not put on the closed loop then there’s no use of it,” he says, because results become person-dependent and slow.
Raju Ramachandran, Chief Manufacturing Officer (East), Nuvoco Vistas Corp, reinforces the operational impact from the plant floor: “There’s a stark difference in what a RoboLab does… ensuring that the consistent quality is there… starts right from the sample collection.” For him, automation is not about removing people; it is about making outcomes repeatable.
Human-centric automation
One of the biggest barriers to performance is not hardware—it is fear. Dr Sabjan describes a persistent concern that digital tools exist to replace operators. “That’s not the way,” he says. “The technology is here to help operator… not to replace them… but to complement them.” The plants that realise this early tend to sustain performance because adoption becomes collaborative rather than forced.
Dr Hegde adds an important caveat: tools can mislead without competence. “If you don’t have the knowledge about the data… this will mislead you… it is like… using ChatGPT… it may tell the garbage.” His point is not anti-technology; it is pro-capability. Operational excellence now requires multidisciplinary teams—process, chemistry, physics, automation and reliability—working as one.
GS Daga, Managing Director, SecMec Consultants, takes the argument further, warning that the technology curve can outpace human readiness: “Our technology movement AI will move fast, and our people will be lagging behind.” For him, the industry’s most urgent intervention is systematic skilling—paired with the environment to apply those skills. Without that, even high-end systems remain underutilised.
Digital energy management
Digital optimisation is no longer confined to pilots; its impact is increasingly quantifiable. Raghu Vokuda, Chief Digital Officer, JSW Cement, describes the outcomes in practical terms: reductions in specific power consumption ‘close to 3 per cent to 7 per cent’, improvements in process stability ‘10 per cent to 20 per cent’, and thermal energy reductions ‘2–5 per cent’. He also highlights value beyond the process line—demand optimisation through forecasting models can reduce peak charges, and optimisation of WHRS can deliver ‘1 per cent to 3 per cent’ efficiency gains.
What matters is the operating approach. Rather than patchwork point solutions, he advocates blueprinting a model digital plant across pillars—maintenance, quality, energy, process, people, safety and sustainability—and then scaling. The difference is governance: defined ownership of data, harmonised OT–IT integration, and dashboards designed for each decision layer—from shopfloor to plant head to network leadership.
Predictive maintenance
Reliability has become a boardroom priority because the cost of failure is blunt and immediate. Dr Hegde captures it crisply: “One day of kiln stoppage can cost several crores.” Predictive maintenance and condition monitoring change reliability from reaction to anticipation—provided plants invest in the right sensors and a holistic architecture.
Dr Sabjan stresses the need for ‘extra investment’ where existing instrumentation is insufficient—kiln shell monitoring, refractory monitoring and other critical measurements. The goal is early warning: “How to have those pre-warnings… where the failures are going to come… and then ensure that the plant availability is high, the downtime is low.”
Ramachandran adds that IoT sensors are increasingly enabling early intervention—temperature rise in bearings, vibration patterns, motor and gearbox signals—moving from prediction to prescription. The operational advantage is not only fewer failures, but planned shutdowns: “Once the shutdown is planned in advance… you have lesser… unpredictable downtimes… and overall… you gain on the productivity.”
Alternative fuels and raw materials
As decarbonisation tightens, AFR becomes central—but scaling it is not simply a procurement decision. Vimal Kumar Jain, Technical Director, Heidelberg Cement, frames AFR as a structured programme built on three foundations: strong pre-processing infrastructure, consistent AFR quality, and a stable pyro process. “Only with the fundamentals in place can AFR be scaled safely—without compromising clinker quality or production stability.”
He also flags a ground reality: India’s AFR streams are often seasonal and variable. “In one season to another season, there is major change… high variation in the quality,” he says, making preprocessing capacity and quality discipline mandatory.
Ramachandran argues the sector also needs ecosystem support: a framework for AFR preprocessing ‘hand-in-hand’ between government and private players, so fuels arrive in forms that can be used efficiently and consistently.
Design and execution discipline
Operational excellence is increasingly determined upstream—by the choices made in concept, layout, technology selection, operability and maintainability. Jain puts it unambiguously: “Long term performance is largely decided before the plant is commissioned.” A disciplined design avoids bottlenecks that are expensive to fix later; disciplined execution ensures safe, smooth start-up with fewer issues.
He highlights an often-missed factor: continuity between project and operations teams. “When knowledge transfer is strong and ownership carries beyond commissioning, the plant stabilises much faster… and lifecycle costs reduce significantly.”
What will define the next decade
Across the value chain, the future benchmark is clear: carbon intensity. “Carbon per ton will matter as much as cost per ton,” says Dr Hegde. Vokuda echoes it: the industry will shift from optimising cost per tonne to carbon per ton.
The pathway, however, is practical rather than idealistic—low-clinker and blended cements, higher thermal substitution, renewable power integration, WHRS scaling and tighter energy efficiency. Jain argues for policy realism: if blended cement can meet quality, why it shall not be allowed more widely, particularly in government projects, and why supplementary materials cannot be used more ambitiously where performance is proven.
At the same time, the sector must prepare for CCUS without waiting for it. Jain calls for CCUS readiness—designing plants so capture can be added later without disruptive retrofits—while acknowledging that large-scale rollout may take time as costs remain high.
Ultimately, operational excellence will belong to plants that integrate—not isolate—the levers: process stability, quality automation, structured AFR, predictive reliability, disciplined execution, secure digitalisation and continuous learning. As Dr Sabjan notes, success will not come from one department owning the change: “Everybody has to own it… then only… the results could be wonderful.”
And as Daga reminds the industry, the future will reward those who keep their feet on the ground while adopting the new: “I don’t buy technology for the sake of technology. It has to make a commercial sense.” In the next decade, that commercial sense will be written in two numbers—cost per tonne and carbon per tonne—delivered through stable, skilled and digitally disciplined operations.
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