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Hanson reports another carbon capture breakthrough

By Guy Woodford November 23, 2022 Read time: 1 min
Hanson's Ribblesdale cement plant

Hanson has demonstrated another ground-breaking carbon capture process, this time at its Ribblesdale cement works in Clitheroe, Lancashire.

The team proved that enforced carbonation of recycled concrete paste (RCP) within the plant’s wet scrubber allows for a high CO2 uptake within less than 30 minutes, preventing emissions from entering the atmosphere.

Marian Garfield
Marian Garfield

During the trial, 15 tonnes of industrial RCP were fed into the scrubber. The result was 100kg of CO2 being bound within each tonne of RCP, demonstrating another carbon capture breakthrough.

Sustainability director Marian Garfield said: “The trial was carried out with our parent company Heidelberg Materials’ R&D team, and marks another important milestone in our carbon capture journey.

“It confirmed the feasibility of enforced carbonation, which supports the circular economy by using waste-recovered concrete fines to remove CO2 emissions from the production process while producing a secondary material that can then be used to replace virgin limestone in cement and concrete production.”

The Ribblesdale trial follows one carried out under semi-dry conditions at Heidelberg Materials’ Brevik plant in Norway and underlines that the company is at the forefront of carbon capture technology to enable its path to net zero. The learning from the two trials will accelerate Heidelberg Materials’ planning and implementation of industrial pilot schemes in the coming years.

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