Building a Better World With Green Cement
With an eye on climate change, a British startup creates a new form of the ancient building material
- By Michael Rosenwald
- Photographs by Alex Masi
- Illustration by John Ritter
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Though still refining its procedures, Novacem is racing with at least five other companies and university centers to come up with a greener cement. “Given all the attention to carbon these days, a lot of entrepreneurs have popped up,” said MIT’s Jennings. “They see the opportunity side.” With cement a $170 billion-a-year industry, investment money is pouring in.
A California company called Calera has perhaps the most unusual approach: It harnesses carbon dioxide emitted from a power plant and mixes it with seawater or brine to create carbonates that are used to make cement. They can be added to Portland cement to replace some or all of the limestone. Calera is backed by a $50 million investment from Vinod Khosla, a computer engineer who is perhaps Silicon Valley’s most respected and deep-pocketed investor in green technologies. “We are actually making our cement out of CO2,” said company founder Brent Constantz. “We are taking CO2 that would have gone into the atmosphere and turning it into cement.” The technology is still in development, with a demonstration plant in Moss Landing, California, and a partnership with a Chinese group to build a plant next to a coal mine in Inner Mongolia, where they plan to use carbon dioxide emissions to make cement.
Calix, an Australian company, makes cement using superheated steam, which modifies the cement particles and makes them purer and more chemically reactive. The process also separates out carbon dioxide, making it easier to capture the gas and keep it out of the atmosphere.
Louisiana Tech University, like Novacem and Calera, is doing away with limestone altogether; it’s using a paste called geopolymer, which is made of fly ash, sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide.
“The dust will eventually settle and one of these ideas will work,” Jennings said.
Early on, one of Novacem’s biggest skeptics was the largest privately owned construction company in Britain, Laing O’Rourke. The executive in charge of keeping tabs on promising university work, Dheeraj Bhardwaj, heard about Novacem’s product through his scholarly connections. He looked at the chemistry, thought everything checked out and a few years ago took the idea to the chairman, who had plenty of doubts. There was no way the cement could be strong enough for commercial use, he said. It needed limestone. When Novacem’s material reached 40 megapascals—the bare minimum amount of strength needed for structural stability—then he might be interested.
Seven days later, a small chunk of Novacem cement placed in a vise-like instrument hit that mark. Twenty-eight days later, it hit 60 megapascals. Bhardwaj then took the results to the chairman, who said, “Let’s make this work.” Laing O’Rourke is now a major Novacem partner. Today, after much tinkering, the cement is approaching 80 megapascals. Concrete made with Novacem cement is comparable in strength to some standard concrete.
Novacem’s other partners include Lafarge, in Paris, the world’s biggest producer of building materials, and Rio Tinto, a London-based global mining company eager to help Novacem dig up magnesium silicates.
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Related topics: Industrial Design Global Warming
Additional Sources
“Cement Technology Roadmap 2009,” International Energy Agency, 2009









Comments (5)
Responding to Maury Minette's comment, yes, cement when mixed with water and various aggregates become concrete, but not all concrete requires high or even medium strength. Many types of foundations are just a setting bed, mortars are just a leveling course. Many times concrete mixtures are just a filler for gravity retaining walls, an acoustical barrier or a fire stop. I would like it here. Robert Pare, Architect
Posted by Robert Pare on December 29,2011 | 08:17 PM
Green cement is a misnomer, the author is really talking about “green concrete,” if the product has a compressive strength of 80MPa. Why would an architect want something that is more expensive and is not as strong as readily available high strength concrete, which measures well over 120MPa? These green products never do the job as cheaply, and in most cases not as well as the products they replace. Green Cement will never occupy more than a niche market unless the government provides a subsidy and mandates its use.
Posted by Maury Minette on December 20,2011 | 01:19 PM
For another way to produce cement while limiting CO2, see "Nuclear Cement" at
http://energyfromthorium.com/2011/11/07/nuclear-cement/
Posted by Robert Hargraves on December 4,2011 | 09:39 AM
How soon could I get some of this? I live in PA and I am re-doing my front sidewalk and steps.
Posted by Isaak Berg on November 28,2011 | 04:00 PM
After working with and around concrete for 40yrs I was wondering 3 things; what the wt. is vs. cocrete, cost vs. portland, and more about the ability to color this new mixture. Along with the use of CO2, these anwer could make this stuff very desirable to the customer.
Posted by Robin Wester on November 24,2011 | 05:15 AM