30
Technology Roadmap
Low-Carbon Transition in the Cement Industry
Regional implementation to 2030
Making waste available as alternative fuel for
industrial users has strong policy implications. It
requires a policy-driven redirection of disposing
waste at landfill sites towards processes that
convert waste into heat and electricity. Introducing
controlled waste collection, treatment and
processing is critical for ensuring quality control
of
alternative fuels, to avoid emissions of basic and
hazardous pollutants and an impact on productivity
of cement plants through operation control and
monitoring systems.
The use of biomass and waste as fuels in cement
production varies greatly across different regions.
Countries in which cement plants operate with
high shares of alternative
fuels have typically
implemented policies that focus on setting
emissions limits and preventing landfilling instead
of restricting the characteristics of alternative fuels
for industrial use. This approach allows cement
plants or industrial operators the flexibility to treat
the alternative fuel combination that they find
most cost-competitive
and suitable to meet the
legislation. For instance, the alternative fuel share
in the cement thermal energy demand in countries
such as Germany or the Czech Republic is reported
at more than 60% (Ecofys, 2017).
Reaching higher shares of alternative fuels in cement
kilns, typically with greater
moisture content and
lower calorific content compared to conventional
fossil fuels, could entail an increase of thermal
energy demand (0.2-0.3 GJ/t clinker for up to a 65%
alternative fuel share) and electricity (2-4 kWh/t
clinker) consumption for drying (thermal energy)
and handling (electricity) purposes (ECRA and
CSI, 2017). No region reaches such high levels by
2030 in the 2DS. The region with the highest share
of alternative fuels in thermal energy for cement
production on average is Europe,
which reaches
40% by that year, followed by America (26%) and
Other Asia Pacific (24%). A redirection of waste to
the cement sector and a strong growth of biomass
use in kilns as a result of adequate supportive policy
and cost-competitive access to sustainable biomass
are needed to realise the
levels of alternative fuels
explored in the 2DS.
The 2DS considers efforts to integrate greater shares
of biomass and waste in cement production. Strong
urbanisation trends in developing countries put
pressure on setting waste management policies
that support sustainable development of either new
urban areas or the expansion of existing ones. Some
regions multiply many times over their current
shares of alternative fuels
of cement thermal energy
by 2030 in the 2DS (e.g. China by 62, Eurasia by 33
and the Middle East by 10). This enormous shift in
relative terms also highlights the low starting levels
in terms of substitution of conventional fossil fuels in
cement production (below 2% in 2014 on average
in these regions) compared to global practice (6%
in 2014). However, despite these radical shifts in the
fuel composition of cement production, biomass
and waste demand for cement
production jointly in
these regions represent 0.5 EJ by 2030 in the 2DS or
6% of the global cement thermal energy demand in
the same year (Figure 11).
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