The Circularity Lighthouse designation recognises pioneering solutions that demonstrate a novel, distinctive circularity approach, proven and substantial impact and value, with significant scale and maturity. Circularity in the built environment has the potential to reduce upfront carbon emissions by up to 75%, according to McKinsey research.
Nollaig Forrest, chief sustainability officer at Holcim, commented: “Circularity is a game changer to decarbonize building at scale. At Holcim we are operating over 100 ECOCycle recycling centers globally to drive circular construction. With our advanced recycling of construction demolition materials, we can already reduce by up to 40% the CO2 footprint of cement. This is just the beginning; as we innovate and partner across the value chain to evolve building norms, we aim to accelerate the shift to circular construction in all metropolitan areas where we operate.”
Holcim says the ECOCycle technology can recycle up to 100% of construction demolition materials across a broad range of applications, from decarbonised raw materials in low-carbon cement formulation, to recycled aggregates in circular concrete. It adds that ECOCycle enables concrete, cement and aggregates to contain from 10% to 100% recycled construction demolition materials inside with no compromise in performance, while reducing their environmental footprint.
Holcim states that it has recycled nearly 7 million tons of construction demolition materials during 2022 into new building solutions, representing over 1,000 truck loads of materials every day. It aims to recycle over 20 million tons of construction demolition materials by 2030 in Europe, by scaling up ECOCycle technology to reach 150 sites by 2030.