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Towards Sustainability: Slag Grinding Circuits

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A detailed explanation of the joint approach of JSW Cement and the KHD Group helps in a better understanding on the acceptance of roller press in slag grinding and finish grinding.

JSW Cement has a strong commitment towards innovation in sustainability and technology to offer environment-friendly construction and building solutions. It is one of India’s leading ‘Green Cement’ manufacturers, growing exponentially since its inception in 2009. Today, after reaching a production capacity of 14 MTPA with minimum industrial bye product over the past 13 years, the group has a vision to build a self-reliant India by boosting the colossal infrastructure and fast-growing economy through projects that set benchmarks. The group aims to increase its production capacity to 75 MTPA by 2030.
In 2009, JSW ordered a 6000 TPD pyroprocessing line along with 8 roller presses for JSW’s first cement production facility at Nandyal, Andhra Pradesh, for raw material grinding, clinker grinding and slag grinding applications. This whole plant was ordered with a belief in KHD Technology. Since then the long continued association between the two companies has been a success story.
In 2015, JSW decided to increase capacity and ordered 16 roller presses for slag and clinker grinding (each unit comprising 2 RP @ 1.2 MTPA). Given the success of the Nandyal project and the market uptake in the use of roller press technology, JSW contracted KHD-HWI to execute the project, at the centre of which was the supply of KHD’s new-generation, energy-efficient roller press circuit. JSW Cement installed new slag grinding circuit at Jajpur plant, Odisha, India, with a KHD Humboldt Wedag roller press system.

Going the high-tech way
With over 160 years of experience in the cement industry, KHD is considered a global leader in cement plant technology. The system offered by KHD Humboldt Wedag for slag grinding is the most energy efficient grinding machine. Special features of the circuit include includes Roller Press (RP 16-170/180), V-separator (VS 80/20) and the well-proven SKS dynamic separator (SKS-V3000).The advantage of this system is that higher capacity requirements are met with lower specific power consumption. The offered system had a lot of innovative design features like, latest generation SKS dynamic separator at lower level to reduce the overall building height, reduced recirculation load on bucket elevator and reduced dust nuisance with the orientation of RP above V-separator. The fresh feed is put to RP first and the roller press discharge material enters the V-Separator. The material is then separated in SKS Separator, The very coarse fraction is discharged at the bottom end of the SKS separator, entering the feed bin of the roller press for further grinding.
The finished product is separated by SKS Rotor and collected in the baghouse. A reduced recirculation load on the bucket elevator, reduced dust nuisance with the orientation of the roller press above the V-separator, and less dedusting equipment due to the system’s self-venting mechanism in the riser of the separator. Figure 1 gives the configuration of the system offered and remains the key highlights of the system.
The focus to use roller press in finish grinding to get maximum energy advantage as compared to any other grinding technology is taking an edge day by day. Apart from electrical energy focus the offered roller press stud surface has minimum wear and offers trouble and maintenance free operation. The stud technology is a boon for slag grinding wherein Tungsten Carbide Studs are fixed on the roller surface by pressing in pre-drilled rollers, which offers autogenous grinding and minimum wear. The life expected out of these roller surfaces varies from 25000 to 40000 hours of operations without any surface maintenance. Figure 2 gives a picture of a stud surface roller.

Operational performance
The operating results of the slag grinding system with the roller press in finish mode are summarised in Figure 3. As can be seen, the very purpose of opting for roller press technology for slag finish grinding was significant savings in electrical energy consumption compared to other technologies and were successfully achieved. Furthermore, after stabilisation within months’ time the production figures recorded were higher than the original guaranteed parameters.

Conclusion
JSW Cement uses superior quality slag produced at its steel manufacturing plant, conforming to IS: 12089 standards for producing PSC. It is created with a combination of upto 45- 50 per cent slag, 45 per cent – 50 per cent clinker, and 3-5 per cent gypsum. PSC has been voted as the most suitable cement for mass construction because of its low heat of hydration. At present, carbon footprints of JSW are the lowest per tonne of cementitious products produced by the company.


During the year 2020-21, JSW Cement’s overall average net scope-1 CO2 emissions is 200 kg CO2/tonne of cementitious material, which is best in the industry. The steps to this achievement definitely goes to the meticulous approach of methodologies and technologies adopted to produce the desired quality of cementitious materials. Today, slag
grinding acceptance of roller press in finish grinding is well recognised throughout the cement industry. In the case of slag grinding, acceptance of roller press in finish grinding is well recognised. It offers a distinct advantage of saving of about 6-7 Kwh/t as compared to Vertical Roller Mill at 4200 Blaine. KHD has sold 27 Sag Grinding Circuits and maintains about 70 per cent market share in slag grinding in India. The advantage comes due to hardness of slag and pressure grinding in roller press instead of attrition and low pressure in Vertical Roller Press. The moisture issue is also tackled with the problem of coating by incorporating a V-separator below the roller press.

Concrete

Molecor Renews OCS Europe Certification Across Spanish Plants

Certification reinforces commitment to preventing microplastic pollution

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Molecor has renewed its OCS Europe certification for another year across all its production facilities in Spain under the Operation Clean Sweep (OCS) voluntary initiative, reaffirming its commitment to sustainability and environmental protection. The renewal underlines the company’s continued focus on preventing the unintentional release of plastic particles during manufacturing, with particular attention to safeguarding marine ecosystems from microplastic pollution.

All Molecor plants in Spain have been compliant with OCS Europe standards for several years, implementing best practices designed to avoid pellet loss and the release of plastic particles during the production of PVC pipes and fittings. The OCS-based management system enables the company to maintain strict operational controls while aligning with evolving regulatory expectations on microplastic prevention.

The renewed certification also positions Molecor ahead of newly published European regulations. The company’s practices are aligned with Regulation (EU) 2025/2365, recently adopted by the European Parliament, which sets out requirements to prevent pellet loss and reduce microplastic pollution across industrial operations.

Extending its sustainability commitment beyond its own operations, Molecor is actively engaging its wider value chain by informing suppliers and customers of its participation in the OCS programme and encouraging responsible microplastic management practices. Through these efforts, the company contributes directly to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, particularly SDG 14 ‘Life below water’, reinforcing its role as a responsible industrial manufacturer committed to environmental stewardship and long-term sustainability.

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Concrete

Coforge Launches AI-Led Data Cosmos Analytics Platform

New cloud-native platform targets enterprise data modernisation and GenAI adoption

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Coforge Limited has recently announced the launch of Coforge Data Cosmos, an AI-enabled, cloud-native data engineering and advanced analytics platform aimed at helping enterprises convert fragmented data environments into intelligent, high-performance data ecosystems. The platform strengthens Coforge’s technology stack by introducing a foundational innovation layer that supports cloud-native, domain-specific solutions built on reusable blueprints, proprietary IP, accelerators, agentic components and industry-aligned capabilities.

Data Cosmos is designed to address persistent enterprise challenges such as data fragmentation, legacy modernisation, high operational costs, limited self-service analytics, lack of unified governance and the complexity of GenAI adoption. The platform is structured around five technology portfolios—Supernova, Nebula, Hypernova, Pulsar and Quasar—covering the full data transformation lifecycle, from legacy-to-cloud migration and governance to cloud-native data platforms, autonomous DataOps and scaled GenAI orchestration.

To accelerate speed-to-value, Coforge has introduced the Data Cosmos Toolkit, comprising over 55 IPs and accelerators and 38 AI agents powered by the Data Cosmos Engine. The platform also enables Galaxy solutions, which combine industry-specific data models with the core technology stack to deliver tailored solutions across sectors including BFS, insurance, travel, transportation and hospitality, healthcare, public sector and retail.

“With Data Cosmos, we are setting a new benchmark for how enterprises convert data complexity into competitive advantage,” said Deepak Manjarekar, Global Head – Data HBU, Coforge. “Our objective is to provide clients with a fast, adaptive and AI-ready data foundation from day one.”

Supported by a strong ecosystem of cloud and technology partners, Data Cosmos operates across multi-cloud and hybrid environments and is already being deployed in large-scale transformation programmes for global clients.

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Concrete

India, Sweden Launch Seven Low-Carbon Steel, Cement Projects

Joint studies to cut industrial emissions under LeadIT

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India and Sweden have announced seven joint projects aimed at reducing carbon emissions in the steel and cement sectors, with funding support from India’s Department of Science and Technology and the Swedish Energy Agency.

The initiatives, launched under the LeadIT Industry Transition Partnership, bring together major Indian companies including Tata Steel, JK Cement, Ambuja Cements, Jindal Steel and Power, and Prism Johnson, alongside Swedish technology firms such as Cemvision, Kanthal and Swerim. Leading Indian academic institutions, including IIT Bombay, IIT-ISM Dhanbad, IIT Bhubaneswar and IIT Hyderabad, are also participating.

The projects will undertake pre-pilot feasibility studies on a range of low-carbon technologies. These include the use of hydrogen in steel rotary kilns, recycling steel slag for green cement production, and applying artificial intelligence to optimise concrete mix designs. Other studies will explore converting blast furnace carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide for reuse and assessing electric heating solutions for steelmaking.

India’s steel sector currently accounts for about 10–12 per cent of the country’s carbon emissions, while cement contributes nearly 6 per cent. Globally, heavy industry is responsible for roughly one-quarter of greenhouse gas emissions and consumes around one-third of total energy.

The collaboration aims to develop scalable, low-carbon industrial technologies that can support India’s net-zero emissions target by 2070. As part of the programme, Tata Steel and Cemvision will examine methods to convert steel slag into construction materials, creating a circular value chain for industrial byproducts.

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