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Heidelberg Materials North America and MHI are working toward first full-scale carbon capture, utilisation, and storage solution for cement industry

Published by , Assistant Editor
World Cement,


Heidelberg Materials announced today that Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) has delivered and installed a compact CO2 pilot capture system 'CO2MPACTTM' at its cement plant in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Heidelberg Materials North America and MHI are working toward first full-scale carbon capture, utilisation, and storage solution for cement industry

Through a partnership between Heidelberg Materials, the Government of Canada and the Government of Alberta, the facility is expected to become the first full-scale carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) solution for the cement industry globally. The new facility, which Heidelberg Materials anticipates being operational by late 2026, will capture more than 1 million tonnes of CO2 annually from its Edmonton cement plant and the combined heat and power facility that is integrated with the capture process.

Alberta Minister of Environment and Protected Areas, Rebecca Schulz, joined the Heidelberg Materials and MHI teams at the Edmonton cement plant to formally initiate operations of the pilot CO2 capture system. “Alberta is widely recognised as a leader in developing CCUS technology thanks in large part to industry trailblazers like Heidelberg Materials,” said Minister Rebecca Schulz. “Our province has invested billions of dollars to help industry cut emissions and will continue to support practical innovations that create jobs and grow the economy. We look forward to seeing this exciting Alberta success story continue in the years ahead.”

This project supports Heidelberg Materials’ vision of leading the decarbonisation of the cement industry. Actively contributing to the development of the new 1.5°C framework, Heidelberg Materials was the first company in the cement sector to have its targets endorsed by the Science Based Targets Initiative (SBTi) in 2019.

“Today is a substantial milestone in our journey to building the world’s first full-scale carbon capture project in the cement industry,” said Joerg Nixdorf, Vice President Cement Operations, Northwest Region for Heidelberg Materials North America. “This initiative focuses the cement industry’s decarbonisation efforts on the Province of Alberta, and we are encouraged by this significant step to lead the sector in CCUS.”

The Edmonton cement plant will leverage MHI’s proprietary Advanced KM CDR ProcessTM using the KS-21TM solvent (jointly developed with The Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.) and will initially pilot the technology by testing different fuel sources and various plant operating modes. The pilot plant will enable Heidelberg Materials to validate the effectiveness of MHI’s technology on its specific flue gas as part of a two-stage competitive process that is currently underway to inform the final design. At full operation, captured CO2 will be transported via pipeline and permanently sequestered. MHI's involvement also includes providing remote support services for the facility, using its proprietary remote monitoring system. “MHI Group is proud to collaborate with Heidelberg Materials as an innovative solution provider for decarbonisation of the cement sector, which is still a new frontier for CCUS and excited to contribute to the effort on carbon neutrality in the Province of Alberta,” said Kenji Terasawa, CEO and Head of Engineering Solutions.


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Read the article online at: https://www.worldcement.com/the-americas/16082023/heidelberg-materials-north-america-and-mhi-are-working-toward-first-full-scale-carbon-capture-utilisation-and-storage-solution-for-cement-industry/

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