Cement manufacturing is among the most carbon-intensive industrial
processes, but an international team of researchers has found that over
time, the widely used building material reabsorbs much of the
CO2 emitted when it was made.
“It sounds counterintuitive, but
it’s true,” said Steven Davis, associate professor of Earth system
science at the University of California, Irvine. “The cement poured
around the world since 1930 has taken up a substantial portion of the
CO2 released when it was initially produced.”
For a study published today in Nature Geoscience,
Davis and colleagues from China, Europe and other U.S. institutions
tallied the emissions from cement manufacturing and compared them to the
amount of CO2reabsorbed by the material over its complete life cycle,
which includes normal use, disposal and recycling. They found that
“cement is a large, overlooked and growing net sink” around the world –
“sink” meaning a feature such as a forest or ocean that takes carbon
dioxide out of the atmosphere and permanently tucks it away so that it
can no longer contribute to climate change.
Cement manufacturing
is considered doubly carbon-intensive because emissions come from two
sources. CO2molecules are released into the air when limestone (calcium
carbonate) is converted to lime (calcium oxide), the key ingredient in
cement. And to generate the heat necessary to break up limestone,
factories also burn large quantities of natural gas, coal and other
fossil fuels.
Davis and his fellow researchers looked at the
problem from a different angle. They investigated how much of the gas is
removed from the environment over time by buildings, roads and other
kinds of infrastructure. Through a process called carbonation, CO2 is
drawn into the pores of cement-based materials, such as concrete and
mortar. This starts at the surface and moves progressively inward,
pulling in more and more carbon dioxide as years pass.
More than
76 billion tons of cement was produced around the world between 1930 and
2013, according to the study; 4 billion tons were manufactured in 2013
alone, mostly in China. It’s estimated that, as a result, a total of
38.2 gigatons of CO2 was released over that period. The scientists
concluded, however, that 4.5 gigatons – or 43 percent of emissions from
limestone conversion – were gradually reabsorbed during that time frame.
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