Skip to main content

Betolar starts commercial side stream study of fly ash from Eesti Energia power plant

Betolar has begun a commercial side stream study commissioned by Eesti Energia to explore using ash from oil shale combustion as a binding agent in concrete. This would make it possible to partially or completely replace cement in concrete. Cement is globally one of the most significant sources of CO2 emissions.
By Guy Woodford December 20, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Ash mountains formed from oil shale mining waste in Estonia. Pic: Strangelet Dreamstime.com

"Oil shale ash is already being used as a substitute for cement in soil stabilisation. Our research aims to find commercial applications with higher added value. Our solutions improve the sustainability and profitability of the value chain of both the mining industry generating side streams and the construction industry utilising them," says Ville Voipio, Chief Commercial Officer at Betolar. 

Betolar
Betolar's commercial side stream study commissioned by Eesti Energia will explore using ash from oil shale combustion as a binding agent in concrete. Pic: Betolar

Eesti Energia is the leading provider of energy services in the Baltics and the region's largest wind energy producer. The company's production of liquid fuels from oil shale will be gradually replaced by the production of chemicals based on a circular economy. One of the current challenges is to identify a solution for the oil shale ash produced by different production processes. Every year, a million tonnes of ash is produced as a side stream of energy production, piled up into mountains of ashes in Narva in northeastern Estonia. 

"Our chemical industry based on a circular economy will be almost completely waste-free, as the by-product of each stage will be a raw material for the next product. We see a lot of value for the construction industry in our ashes. The goal of the collaboration between Eesti Energia and Betolar is to identify further applications for the concrete industry. The new ways of use support the sustainable development goals of our operations," says Veljo Aleksandrov, Project Director at Eesti Energia.

Eesti Energia
Eesti Energia is the leading provider of energy services in the Baltics and the region's largest wind energy producer. Pic: Eesti Energia

The assignment supports Betolar's strategy, updated last spring, which focuses on identifying and developing alternative side streams to find new solutions in the construction and mining industries. Earlier in the autumn, Betolar announced that it was commissioned to conduct a research project to commercialise mining side streams in Thailand. In cooperation with Metso, Betolar's side stream expertise can be offered to customers using Metso's lithium processes.  

"The new assignments highlight the urgent need for new, circular and low-carbon solutions in the construction and mining industries. We now see the pressure on a sustainable mining and construction industry increasing demand for our patented and commercialised solutions. Side streams that currently end up as waste can be converted commercially valuable raw materials, reducing the mining industry's waste load," Voipio says.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

boombox1
boombox2