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 4 of 4)
“The cement industry is now stepping up in financially significant, in scientifically significant ways right now,” said Jennings, referring to all of the various experimental approaches. “The world is changing. Everyone, including all the cement companies, will need to be as green as possible and take care of the world a little better.”
Jennings declined to endorse any particular new cement. “If Novacem’s works,” he said, “it’s a very attractive idea.”
Bhardwaj is more committal. He said he recently went to his engineering team. “Honestly, don’t be polite,” he told them. “Put aside any question about the carbon. Do you think this is something close to Portland cement?” The answer surprised him: They said it was better. Why? Not only was it strong, but it was pure white. Portland cement is slightly gray. “You could add colors to this cement,” Bhardwaj said. “Imagine having any color cement wall in your house that you wanted.”
The cement is a lovely shade of white, as Vlasopoulos pointed out while showing off his company’s prototype cement factory. Referring to the neighboring bioscience labs, he said, “We’re louder,” adding: “They are curing people in there; we are curing something else.” A hulking machine in front of him, idle at the moment, has long pipes that bang and clank, alarms that go off, and mixers that churn and spit out buckets of Vlasopoulos’ creation.
Vlasopoulos was in a peppy mood, having just proposed to his girlfriend the day before. (She said yes.) Over in a corner of the room was what he called “our museum.” On a small table were early chunks of Novacem cement—they looked like children’s blocks, just dustier. “This was not so good,” he said, holding up a fragile-looking one that was chipped. “Now we know what we are doing.” The plant can produce about five tons of cement per year. The company is also working on another facility that would produce 200 tons per year. If all goes well, the company intends to license its recipe to cement makers around the world.
The major obstacle that the company still has to overcome is history. Portland cement works. Always has, since that afternoon in 1824 in Joseph Aspdin’s kitchen. “Cement has been around a very long time,” Bhardwaj said. “People trust that. They can look around at all the buildings that have survived hundreds of years. So for Novacem, the proof of durability will take time. They will have to go slow. If I have to build a bridge or a building using Novacem cement, how do I convince people that that is OK? That’s the challenge. Nobody wants a bridge to fall down.”
Asked whether he would cross a bridge built with Novacem cement, Bhardwaj said, “I would have no problem with that.” But that bridge hasn’t been built yet.
Michael Rosenwald wrote about nanotechnology and flu hunters for Smithsonian. John Ritter lives in Pennsylvania.
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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