Carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) takes centre stage in the May 2024 issue of Global Cement Magazine, which will be distributed at the 66th IEEE-IAS/PCA Cement Industry Technical Conference in Denver, US and the inaugural Global CemCCUS Conference in Oslo, Norway. The issue includes a plant report from GCC’s Pueblo plant in Colorado, ahead of the IEEE-IAS/PCA visit, and a review of the famous CCS project at Heidelberg Materials’ Brevik plant, which will be toured by delegates at the CemCCUS event.
We also hear from Fortera about its recently-launched ReCarb plant in Redding, California, which uses waste CO2 to produce a reactive form of calcium carbonate, and from Ardent and RHI Magnesita, which are using membranes to reduce CO2 emissions from refractory production in Austria. Capsol Technologies, recently selected for a CCUS feasibility study in the UK, presents inorganic CO2 capture technology too.
There are technical features on condition monitoring, decarbonisation, alternative fuels and the use of biocarbon in concrete. There are also reviews of the cement sectors of Austria and Switzerland.
Become a Global Cement Member to read these articles
Sign-up >
Issue introduction
Become a Global Cement Member to read premium content.
We take a look at Heidelberg Materials’ new CCS facility in Brevik, Norway, to discover how it works and how the idea developed for the global cement industry’s first full-scale CCS facility.
Fortera officially opened its first ReCarb plant in Redding, California, US, on 12 April 2024. Global Cement spoke to key staff at the company to find out about this important milestone.
RHI Magnesita is embarking on an exciting CO2 capture project using Ardent’s Optiperm facilitated transport membrane technology.
Capsol Technologies’ inorganic approach to CO2 capture could offer huge savings for cement producers.
Please complete the form below to download the document [DOCUMENT_TITLE]