material recycling

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Transcript material recycling

Beton – ključni korak prema održivoj
gradnji
CEMEX Hrvatska d.d.
Holcim (Hrvatska) d.o.o.
Našicecement d.d.
Calucem d.o.o.
A SUSTAINABLE CEMENT AND CONCRETE
INDUSTRY FOR EUROPE
CONCRETE – STEP TO SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION
5-6 MAY 2015
Koen Coppenholle – CEMBUREAU Chief Executive
OUR MEMBERS AND ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Today: 29 Members
(27 full Members and
2 Associate Members)
S
FIN
N
IRL
Full Members = national cement
industry associations and cement
companies of the European Union
(with the exception of Cyprus,
Malta and Slovakia) plus Norway,
Switzerland and Turkey
EST
LV
LT
DK
UK
NL
B
L
F
P
E
PL
D
CZ
A
H
SI HR
C
H
I
Croatia and Serbia are Associate
Members of CEMBUREAU
RO
RS
GR
BG
TR
WE PROMOTE A UNIQUE PRODUCT
• Joint advocacy by the concrete sector
(cement, precast and readymix concrete)
CONCRETE
responds to societal challenges through its
durability and resilience, affordability and proven
fire resistant properties
an engine for growth / local products for a local
market / multiplier effect / widely available and
affordable
optimal “whole-life performance” thanks to
durability, thermal mass / abundantly available /
fully recyclable
www.theconcreteinitiative.eu
FOCUS ON THREE PILLARS OF
SUSTAINABILITY
ECONOMIC
SOCIAL
ENVIRONMENT
− Growth
− People’s needs
− Reducing emissions
− Jobs
− Affordability
− Return on investment
− Comfort
− State of the art
technology
− Economic feasibility
− Safety
− Innovation
− Assess impact of
operations
THROUGHOUT THE SUPPLY CHAIN
quarry
manufacturing
product
clinker & cement
− Responsible sourcing
− Biodiversity
− Energy recovery / material
recycling
− Focus on innovation &
environmental performance
− 2050 Roadmap
FULLY LOCAL SUPPLY CHAIN
local jobs, growth, innovation
− Durable
− Energy efficient /
thermal mass
− Resilient (fire / climate
change adaptation)
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION: ENERGY
FACT: energy = 30% of cost base
CONTRIBUTION: 32% alternative fuels in cement kilns
replacing oil, petcoke
4.6
Conventional
fossil fuels
31.6
63.7
Conventional fossil
Alternative fossil
Biomass
1990
97.4
2.5
0.1
2000
88.6
9.8
1.6
2005
82.9
13.1
3.9
2006
Alternative
fossil fuels
81.9
14.0
4.1
2007
80.9
15.3
3.8
Biomass
2008
78.8
17.1
4.1
2009
72.1
23.1
4.8
2010
69.6
26.1
4.3
2011
66.0
29.0
4.9
2012
63.7
31.6
4.6
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION: WASTE
MANAGEMENT
FACT: each EU citizen consumes 15 tonnes of materials
annually while generating 5 tonnes of waste with half
going to landfill
CONTRIBUTION: the cement industry specializes in the
treatment of difficult waste / reduces waste to landfill
waste
Energy recovery
Material recycling
Example: tyres
Calorific value
(energy recovery)
Recycling iron, silica
(material recycling)
Replaces primary
fuels (petcoke; oil)
and raw materials
in the kiln
6.000.000 t
16.000.000 t 7.000.000 t
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION:
CLIMATE CHANGE
FACT: cement industry championed a CO2 reduction
since 1990 (CO2 emissions / tonne cement from 719kg in 1990 to 660 kg in 2010) /
Europe represents 5% of world production, China 56% /
Climate change is a global problem
CONTRIBUTION: CEMENT 2050 LOW CARBON ROADMAP
by 2050 …
• 32% CO2 emissions reduction overall without CCS;
80% with CCS
• 60% alternative fuels / 40% of which biomass / reducing 27%
in fuel CO2 emissions
• 70% clinker-to-cement ratio
• 5% share novel cements
FIVE PARALLEL ROUTES TOWARDS 2050
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION: CONCRETE
FACT:
−
Buildings consume 40% of energy in Europe / a
conventional building consumes 150-200kWh/m2/year
−
35% to 42% of Europe’s enormous building stock dates
back to the pre-1960s and is only gradually (1%/y) being
replaced by more energy efficient buildings
−
Construction and demolition waste in Europe amounts to
450 Mt/y – only 1/3 is recycled
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION: CONCRETE
CONTRIBUTION:
−
Concrete has thermal mass properties which can help
reducing energy consumption
−
Concrete is durable with a lifespan of minimum
50 years and resilience against extreme weather
conditions and fire
−
Concrete is fully recyclable + absorbs CO2 over the life of
a building (recarbonation)
FACTS AND CONTRIBUTION:
THE ECONOMY
FACT: over 5 MM young people unemployed in Europe /
21.7% youth unemployment / EU growth remains modest /
EU 28 needs to invest 2.2 tn in energy infrastructure by 2050
CONTRIBUTION:
−
Cement and concrete add EUR 56 bn to European economy
−
545,000 jobs in cement and concrete production
−
Local jobs throughout the supply chain
−
Multiplier effect of investment – 1 : 3
SUMMARY: OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE
THREE PILLARS OF SUSTAINABILITY
ECONOMIC
− Industrial growth
− Jobs
SOCIAL
ENVIRONMENT
− Health & Safety
− Waste management
focus in operations
leaders
− Multiplier on the
economy
− Responsible
business
− Investments
− Affordable product
− Concrete protects
people
− Continued focus on
CO2 reductions and
energy-efficiency
improvements
− Key contributor to
circular economy
WE NEED THE RIGHT REGULATORY
FRAMEWORK
FACTS
WHAT POLICY NEEDS TO DELIVER…
Cement sector has long-term investment
cycles
Legal certainty / predictability
EU Climate change legislation imposes
constraints on EU industry’s competitiveness
Global level playing field / best performer
needs to get 100% free allowances (full
carbon leakage protection)
Cement 2050 Roadmap sets out technical
efforts & boundaries until 2050
Emission reduction efforts need to take
technological potential into account
Energy costs = 30% of cost base
System of EU harmonized electricity
compensation to be put in place
Cement sector needs access to recyclable and Implement ban on landfill of
recoverable waste to play its role in circular
recyclable/recoverable waste + improve
economy, reducing primary resources
recycling of concrete
Concrete is a low-carbon product that delivers
unique CO2 and energy efficiency benefits
over the life-cycle approach to buildings
Assess building performance over complete
life-cycle and carry out sustainability
assessment at building level
Association
Européenne
du Ciment
The European
Cement
Association
Follow us on Twitter! @CEMBUREAU
www.cembureau.eu
OKRUGLI STOL
„Beton – ključni korak prema održivoj gradnji“
 Mirjana Čubrić Štefok - Ministarstva graditeljstva i prostornog uređenjaVoditeljica Službe za građevno – tehničku regulativu
 Tomislav Ćurković, predsjednik Hrvatske komore arhitekata
 Jelena Bleizzifer, članica Uprave Instituta IGH
 Koen Coppenholle, direktor CEMBUREAU