Cauldon Cement Plant breaks ground on £13m project to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 30,000 tonnes annually
Construction has started at Lafarge Cement’s Cauldon Plant, located in Staffordshire, on a £13m investment project to reduce its carbon footprint.
This will be achieved by building a new pre-processing plant for the storage, handling and feeding of solid alternative fuels, that would otherwise end up as landfill. In addition, a new chloride bypass will be installed, which will ensure quality of product and result in no additional waste.
- Construction of £13m project starts - due to complete early 2022
- The new chloride bypass and pre-processing plant will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 30,000 tonnes annually
- New facilities will replace use of fossil fuels with alternatives derived from solid waste that would otherwise end up as landfill
The world class operation, which was the first dry-process cement plant in the UK, is part of Aggregate Industries, which is itself owned by LafargeHolcim - a world leader in carbon reduction initiatives, having recently committed to its net zero climate pledge.
Steve Curley, Managing Director Cement, said: “We have a successful history at Cauldon of moving away from the traditional use of fossil fuels and instead utilising renewable fuel sources. This investment marks the next step forward for our sustainable future, allowing us to provide a circular economy by recycling waste supplied to us by reputable organisations that are approved against our strict specification standards, and then using it as fuel within our production process.”
After extensive consultation with the local community and other stakeholders, the project started construction in March 2021 and is due to complete in early 2022.
The project consists of two parts, the new pre-processing facility with a haulage and feeding platform which will be constructed across the road from the main plant, connected via an innovative conveyor that fully contains the waste fuel during transfer to the plant. This facility can provide 100,000 tonnes of waste fuel per year to the main plant - utilising materials that would otherwise go to landfill.
The second part of the project is the new chloride bypass, which is built into the existing kiln equipment in the main cement plant. The new bypass removes any additional chloride which may be present due to the use of the new fuel sources, ensuring a consistent high quality product is still produced. The excess chloride is then utilised at the end of the process, resulting in no additional waste materials.
Dragan Maksimovic, CEO at Aggregate Industries UK added: “It is great to see us continuing to recognise the importance of sustainability and invest in Cauldon Cement Plant to ensure that we further reduce carbon emissions and remain sustainable for the long term, both as a local employer and contributor to the local economy, as well as a UK-wide supplier of high quality products and services."
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