5
Cement is used to make concrete, the most consumed
manufactured substance on the planet. Concrete
builds homes, schools, hospitals, workplaces,
transport systems and infrastructure for clean water,
sanitation and energy, which are important for quality
of life and social and economic wellbeing.
The cement sector is the third-largest industrial
energy consumer, comprising 7% of the global
industrial energy use (10.7 exajoules [EJ]). Cement
production involves the decomposition of limestone
(calcium carbonate), which represents about
two-thirds of the total CO
2
emissions generated in
the process, with the remainder of CO
2
emissions
being due to combustion of fuels. Thus despite
considerable progress on energy efficiency, the
use of alternative fuels and clinker replacements,
the sector has the second-largest share of total
direct
1
industrial carbon dioxide (CO
2
) emissions,
at 27% (2.2 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide per year
[GtCO
2
/ yr]) in 2014.
Rising global population and urbanisation patterns,
coupled with infrastructure development needs,
drive up the demand for cement and concrete.
Global cement production is set to grow by 12-23%
by 2050 from the current level. Some regions, such
as People’s Republic of China and the Middle East,
have excess cement production capacity, with
cement production per capita levels well above the
global average. Other regions, such as India and
Africa, are set to increase their domestic cement
production capacity to fulfil their infrastructure
development needs.
Direct CO
2
emissions from the cement industry
are expected to increase by 4% globally under
the International Energy Agency (IEA) Reference
Technology Scenario (RTS
2
) by 2050 despite an
increase of 12% in global cement production in the
same period.
Realising the sustainable transition of the 2 degree
Celsius (°C) Scenario (2DS) implies a significant
reduction of the global direct CO
2
emissions from
cement manufacture by 24% compared to current
levels by 2050 still with the expected increase
in global cement production. This represents
cumulative emissions reductions of 7.7 GtCO
2
compared to the RTS by 2050, reaching 1.7 GtCO
2
,
equivalent to around 90% of current total global
industrial direct CO
2
emissions. Implementing
this vision requires accelerated development and
deployment of CO
2
emissions reduction levers,
supportive policy, public-private collaboration,
financing mechanisms and social acceptance.
1. Direct CO
2
emissions refer to emissions that are generated and
released in the cement production process.
2. Please refer to Box 1 below for details on scenarios.
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