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A top of the range A-grade boiler could have as much as 96 per cent efficiency

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Shridhar Nambi, Director & CEO, Greenesol Power Systems

Greenesol Power Systems is one of the leading equipment suppliers for cement companies. Shridhar Nambi, Director and CEO, Greenesol Power Systems, explains how to get the best from boilers, critical equipment in manufacturing facilities. Excerpts from the interview.

What is the range of boiler technologies offered?

We have a very wide range in boilers in terms of capacity ranging from 10 mw to 500 mw and fuel flexibility with systems running on coal, bio mass, bagasse, natural gas, waste heat recovery.

Which are the latest innovations in boiler design?

The latest in the market is the new boiler master concept, which combines the benefits of throttle pressure firing (return to the throttle pressure set point) and drum pressure firing (dynamic stability). It consists of a throttle pressure controller (reset action plus feed-forward signal) working in parallel with a drum pressure controller (proportional and derivative action). Since they are separated in the time domain, the controllers do not interact. This approach has proven particularly effective at stabilising the operation of boilers equipped with low-NOX burners.

The new arrangement is much more stable than traditional throttle pressure firing. It has been successfully deployed on several units and should be of great interest to owners of subcritical coal-fired units because it offers a quick and inexpensive solution to pressure stability problems.

How does drum pressure compares with throttle pressure for boiler control?

Drum pressure is far superior to throttle pressure as a boiler control index. Drum pressure, as a function of energy balance, is represented by a first-order lag, whereas throttle pressure is represented by a third-order lag.

A standard proportional-integral-derivative algorithm cannot execute its derivative function properly on a third-order process feedback variable such as throttle pressure.

Drum pressure reacts more quickly than throttle pressure to changes in heat input, in some cases up to 45 seconds faster. Faster feedback improves control loop stability. Since drum pressure reacts faster, using it for feedback improves boiler stability. Changes in drum pressure are linear, with respect to changes in energy balance.

There’s a good reason why most boilers are still fired by throttle pressure: Throttle pressure is the final, visible product. It is what impacts steam turbine performance. Drum pressure is an intermediate result; the control system has to be stable and maintain throttle pressure as constant as possible.

What are the major factors that reduce boiler lifecycle and reliability?

Boiler tube failures remain a leading behind the breakdown in power boilers. The need for strategic planning with regards to inspections, preventative maintenance and targeted replacements is great. Identifying where and how to begin a boiler management program can be viewed as an insurmountable obstacle by many utility operators and owners. In addition, the cookie-cutter approach established in many cases results in poor reliability improvement due to specific operating and design conditions is not identified and evaluated. Each boiler has its own unique operational history and condition. To improve a boiler’s reliability, it is imperative to consider the boiler’s unique conditions and develop a strategic plan to improve safety and reliability.

What are the challenges for companies in boiler design and manufacture?

Depending on where they are located on the production circle, companies should prioritise four broad areas for resource productivity: production, product design, value recovery, and supply-circle management.

Production

Most manufacturers have already made tremendous gains by implementing programmes to improve labour and capital productivity, for example, through lean manufacturing. Such efforts can improve resource productivity if they are adapted to include criteria for reducing the consumption of energy and raw materials. Here we focus on energy, a particular concern for upstream manufacturers, since energy costs can account for as much as 20 per cent of their overall production costs. Manufacturers can take four steps to increase energy productivity. Companies can adapt methodology for lean-value-add identification to map energy consumption at every step of their operating processes. This will enable them to calculate the thermodynamically minimum energy required and evaluate actual consumption relative to this theoretical limit (an approach known as pinch analysis). The analysis reveals where energy is wasted and how losses can be avoided.

One US surfactant maker that conducted a heat-value-add analysis found that only 10 per cent of its steam-heat inputs were thermo-dynamically required to make its products; 90 per cent were wasted. The manufacturer implemented about 20 measures and captured steam savings worth 30 percent of its baseline energy costs, enabling it to recoup what it invested to launch the effort within three years. One measure, which involved implementing a new software algorithm to control the company’s heating and cooling control loop, enabled it to reduce its need for steam by 5 per cent.

Moving beyond pinch analysis, companies can extend their lean programmes to improve energy efficiency by optimising energy integration in heating and cooling operations. For instance, one chemical company changed its process to release heat more quickly during polymerisation, allowing evaporation to start sooner, thus reducing the energy it used in the subsequent drying stage by 10 per cent.

Companies can use lean approaches to identify process-design and equipment changes that can deliver greater energy efficiency. One Chinese steel mill saved 8 million renminbi (about $1.2 million) annually by lowering the levelling bar in a coke furnace an extra few centimetres, which reduced the mill’s total energy cost by 0.4 percent. The mill achieved an additional 5 million renminbi ($730,000) in annual savings by adding an insulation layer to ladles used in steelmaking.

Lean-energy approaches can eliminate waste and capture savings by optimising the interface between producers-for example, steam-boiler operators, cooling-water-unit operators, and power suppliersùand consumers. One chemical plant managed to avoid a $2 million investment to increase its boiler capacity by improving consumption planning-specifically, ensuring that demand would not pass the threshold that triggered pressure drops during demand spikes.

Product design

By incorporating energy and materials parameters into their product-design approaches, companies could reduce the use of materials that are hazardous, non-renewable, difficult to source, or expensive. Changes to product design could increase opportunities for recycling and reusing components and materials at the end of a product’s life cycle. And designers could prioritise the incorporation of sustainable features into their products to reduce the impact products have on the environment. These principles constitute a philosophy known as circular design, which extends beyond products to systems and business models.

Companies that take these steps could reduce costs and facilitate compliance with regulations while bolstering their reputation and building relationships with consumers and other stakeholders. Additionally, they can often expand existing design to cost methodologies to quantify the financial or brand impact of incorporating sustainable features in their products.

Where do customers usually go wrong while picking up the right boiler technology?

Choosing the right boiler can be complicated. As well as the costs involved, you have to consider the type that works it needed.

All new boilers must now be high-efficiency condensing boilers unless it is too difficult to fit one. Condensing boilers capture the heat that is normally lost by traditional boilers and reuses it. This means that a top of the range A-grade boiler could have as much as 96 per cent efficiency.

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Economy & Market

TSR Will Define Which Cement Companies Win India’s Net-Zero Race

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Jignesh Kundaria, Director and CEO, Fornnax Technology

India is simultaneously grappling with two crises: a mounting waste emergency and an urgent need to decarbonise its most carbon-intensive industries. The cement sector, the second-largest in the world and the backbone of the nation’s infrastructure ambitions, sits at the centre of both. It consumes enormous quantities of fossil fuel, and it has the technical capacity to consume something else entirely: the waste our cities cannot get rid of.

According to CPCB and NITI Aayog projections, India generates approximately 62.4 million tonnes of municipal solid waste annually, with that figure expected to reach 165 million tonnes by 2030. Much of this waste is energy-rich and non-recyclable. At the same time, cement kilns operate at material temperatures of approximately 1,450 degrees Celsius, with gas temperatures reaching 2,000 degrees. This high-temperature environment is ideal for co-processing, ensuring the complete thermal destruction of organic compounds without generating toxic residues. The physics are in our favour. The infrastructure is not.

Pre-processing is not the support act for co-processing. It is the main event. Get the particle size wrong, get the moisture wrong, get the calorific value wrong and your kiln thermal stability will suffer the consequences.

The Regulatory Push Is Real

The Solid Waste Management (SWM) Rules 2026 mandate that cement plants progressively replace solid fossil fuels with Refuse-Derived Fuel (RDF), starting at a 5 per cent baseline and scaling to 15 per cent within six years. NITI Aayog’s 2026 Roadmap for Cement Sector Decarbonisation targets 20 to 25 per cent Thermal Substitution Rate (TSR) by 2030. Beyond compliance, every tonne of coal replaced by RDF generates measurable carbon reductions which is monetisable under India’s emerging Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS). TSR is no longer a sustainability metric. It is a financial lever.

Yet our own field assessments across multiple Indian cement plants reveal a sobering reality: the primary barrier to scaling AFR adoption is not waste availability. It is the fragmented and under-engineered pre-processing ecosystem that sits between the waste and the kiln.

Why Indian Waste Is a Different Engineering Problem

Indian municipal solid waste is not the material that imported shredding equipment was designed for. Our waste streams frequently exceed 40 per cent to 50 per cent moisture content, particularly during monsoon cycles, saturated with abrasive inerts including sand, glass, and stone. Plants relying on imported OEM equipment face months of downtime awaiting proprietary spare parts. Machines built for segregated, low-moisture waste fail quickly and disrupt the entire pre-processing operation in Indian conditions.

The two most common failures we observe are what I call the biting teeth problem and the chewing teeth problem. Plants relying solely on a primary shredder reduce bulk waste to large fractions, but the output remains too coarse for stable kiln combustion. Others attempt to use a secondary shredder as a standalone unit without a primary stage to pre-size the feed, leading to catastrophic mechanical failure. When both stages are present but mismatched in throughput capacity, the system becomes a bottleneck. Achieving the 40 to 70 tonnes per hour required for meaningful coal displacement demands a precisely coordinated two-stage process.

Engineering a Made-in-India Answer

At Fornnax, our response to these challenges is grounded in one principle: Indian waste demands Indian engineering. Our systems are built around feedstock homogeneity, the holy grail of kiln stability. Consistent particle size and predictable calorific value are the foundation of stable kiln combustion. Without them, no TSR target is achievable at scale.

Our SR-MAX2500 Dual Shaft Primary Shredder (Hydraulic Drive) processes raw, baled, or loosely mixed MSW, C&I waste, bulky waste, and plastics, reducing them to approximately 150 mm fractions at throughputs of up to 40 tonnes per hour. The R-MAX 3300 Single Shaft Secondary Shredder (Hydraulic Drive), introduced in 2025, takes that primary output and produces RDF fractions in the 30 to 80 mm range at up to 30 tonnes per hour, specifically optimised for consistent kiln feeding. We have also introduced electric drive configurations under the SR-100 HD series, with capacities between 5 and 40 tonnes per hour, already operational at a leading Indian waste-processing facility.

Looking ahead, Fornnax is expanding its portfolio with the upcoming SR-MAX3600 Hydraulic Drive primary shredder at up to 70 tonnes per hour and the R-MAX2100 Hydraulic drive secondary shredder at up to 20 tonnes per hour, designed specifically for the large-scale throughput that higher TSR ambitions require.

The Investment Case Is Now

The 2070 Net-Zero target is not a distant goal for India’s cement sector. It starts today, with decisions being made on the plant floor.

The SWM Rules 2026 are already in effect, requiring cement plants to replace coal with RDF. Carbon credit markets are opening up, and coal prices are not going to get cheaper. Every tonne of coal a cement plant replaces with waste-derived fuel saves money on one side and generates carbon credit revenue on the other. Pre-processing infrastructure is no longer just a compliance requirement. It is a business investment with a measurable return.

The good news is that nothing is missing. The technology works. The waste is available in every Indian city. The government has provided the policy direction. The only thing standing between where the industry is today and where it needs to be is the commitment to build the right infrastructure.

The cement companies that move now will not just meet the regulations. They will be ahead of every competitor that waits.

About The Author

Jignesh Kundaria is the Director and CEO of Fornnax Technology. Over an experience spanning more than two decades in the recycling industry, he has established himself as one of India’s foremost voices on waste-to-fuel technology and alternative fuel infrastructure.

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Concrete

WCA Welcomes SiloConnect as associate corporate member

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The World Cement Association (WCA) has announced SiloConnect as its newest associate corporate member, expanding its network of technology providers supporting digitalisation in the cement industry. SiloConnect offers smart sensor technology that provides real-time visibility of cement inventory levels at customer silos, enabling producers to monitor stock remotely and plan deliveries more efficiently. The solution helps companies move from reactive to proactive logistics, improving delivery planning, operational efficiency and safety by reducing manual inspections. The technology is already used by major cement producers such as Holcim, Cemex and Heidelberg Materials and is deployed across more than 30 countries worldwide.

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Concrete

TotalEnergies and Holcim Launch Floating Solar Plant in Belgium

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TotalEnergies and Holcim have commissioned a floating solar power plant in Obourg, Belgium, built on a rehabilitated former chalk quarry that has been converted into a lake. The project has a generation capacity of 31 MW and produces around 30 GWh of renewable electricity annually, which will be used to power Holcim’s nearby industrial operations. The project is currently the largest floating solar installation in Europe dedicated entirely to industrial self-consumption. To ensure minimal impact on the surrounding landscape, more than 700 metres of horizontal directional drilling were used to connect the solar installation to the electrical substation. The project reflects ongoing collaboration between the two companies to support industrial decarbonisation through renewable energy solutions and innovative infrastructure development.

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