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Sustainable transition towards biomass-based cement Industry: A review

Kusuma, Ravi Teja
Hiremath, Rahul B.
Rajesh, Pachimatla
Kumar, Bimlesh
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Abstract
Cement manufacturing is a hard-to-abate industrial sector that accounts for 5 to 8% of global anthropogenic emissions. Approximately 80 to 90% of these emissions occur during limestone calcination and fuel combustion processes. Decarbonising these two emission and energy-intensive processes requires a sustained and regenerative supply of low-carbon resources. Unlike other renewables such as solar or wind, biomass is uniquely positioned to abate emissions from fuel combustion and process emissions by substituting clinker with biomass ash. Moreover, bioenergy with carbon capture utilisation or storage offsets the energy penalties and associated emissions due to the deployment of carbon-capturing technologies. The sustainable transition towards biomass-based industry involves multifaceted socio-technical conflicts across bioenergy and cement sectors. This review uncovers opportunities, challenges and interplay involved in the sustainable transition of the cement industry through the lens of circular bioeconomy and multi-level perspective. The review found that 20 to 30% of fossil fuels can be replaced with biofuels without significant capital investments. This can be further enhanced through pre-processing of biomass and process optimisation. Clinker substitution with biomass ash is reported to be in the range of 3 to 80%. To increase the uptake of biomass, key aspects of circular bioeconomy are good starting points for transition at an organisation level, but system-wide change demands policy interventions. The policy intervention points presented in this study will serve as focus areas for practitioners and policy makers.
Citation
Kusuma, R.T., Hiremath, R.B., Rajesh, P., Kumar, B. and Renukappa, S. (2022) Sustainable transition towards biomass-based cement Industry: A review. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 163, Article Number 112503
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en
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This is an accepted manuscript of a paper published by Elsevier on 02/05/2022. The accepted manuscript of the publication may differ from the final published version.
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1364-0321
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