Technology Roadmap Low-Carbon Transition in the Cement Industry Mobilising financial support There is an urgent need to mobilise public-private
investment to support the sustainable transition
of the cement industry. Robust carbon pricing
can be one of the key elements in low-carbon
transition of society, but governments worldwide
struggle with implementation or with ensuring
a stable price level. Traditional financing criteria
used by industry are not appropriate for carbon
mitigation technologies unless a global carbon
price (or incentive) is sufficiently high and regionally
symmetric to adequately value the cost of reducing
CO
2
emissions.
Governments should pursue investment risk-
mitigating mechanisms that are results oriented and
unlock private finance in areas with low likelihood
of independent private investment. In the past,
funding of CCS demonstration projects has had
a primary focus on power generation projects,
but those should be expanded to target industrial
applications including the cement sector. These
mechanisms could reduce the risk associated
with initial capital investment. They could also
help investors to maintain a better cash flow by
unlocking shares of total allocated financial support
upon completion of predefined milestones through
the development or demonstration processes.
International foundations can also play an
important role in supporting technology
implementation and demonstration projects that
contribute to the sustainable transition of cement
KEY MESSAGE: The bulk of the 2DS global cumulative additional investments occurs after 2030. Figure 18: Global cumulative additional investments in the roadmap vision (2DS) compared to the RTS, based on the low-variability case by 2050 Note: Additional investment numbers are assessed considering low- and high-bound sensitivity ranges for specific investment costs.
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manufacturing, especially in developing countries.
The Green Climate Fund, which is accountable
to the United Nations, mobilised pledges for
USD 10.3 billion in 2014 from governments to
finance the pressing mitigation and adaptation
needs in developing economies and to unlock
private investment (GCF, 2017). The Mission
Innovation initiative was announced in 2015, with
22 participating countries and the European Union
seeking to double investments in clean energy R&D
over five years to 2021. The initiative has focused
on seven innovation challenges, which include
carbon capture and clean energy materials (Mission
Innovation, 2015).