Published by Todd Bush on October 2, 2023
Addition of CO2 as a diluted gas from industrial waste sources or the air would turn C-Crete's concrete into a carbon-negative building material
SAN LEANDRO, Calif., Oct. 2, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- C-Crete Technologies is developing a method for using carbon dioxide captured at industrial sources or from the air as an ingredient in its cement-free concrete, in work accelerated by a $2 million funding from the US Department of Energy.
The DOE funding will help propel C-Crete's already eco-friendly product into the exceptional category of carbon-negative building materials, possibly the first pourable, ready-mix concrete product to achieve this longtime goal of the industry.
The CO2 incorporated into the product – whether captured from the air as the concrete cures or from industrial point sources – could be used in a diluted form, eliminating the costly step of separating it from other gases. Once mineralized in the concrete, the diluted CO2 would make the new material stronger, tougher and more durable than conventional concrete.
At the core of C-Crete's innovation lies its patented high-performance, cement-free binder technology that uses different local materials as feedstocks. C-Crete's binder produces almost no CO2 in its manufacturing and continues to absorb it from the air over time. Its scalability and cost-parity with conventional cement make it a viable alternative to ordinary Portland cement – a notorious contributor to global CO2 emissions.
The DOE's support for C-Crete's work underscores the profound impact that innovative approaches can have in the battle against carbon emissions.
"We are committed to crafting a cement-free, ready-mix, carbon-negative concrete that doesn't just mitigate carbon emissions but actively contributes to reversing climate change," says Rouzbeh Savary, Ph.D., founder and president of C-Crete Technologies. "Our aim is nothing short of revolutionizing this hard-to-abate, carbon-heavy sector of the construction industry."
"Concrete is one of the most difficult materials to address within the construction industry because the way it is used often precludes other sustainable strategies such as re-use and effective recycling," says Stuart Macalister, technical design lead at Heatherwick Studio, an international award-winning architecture firm based in London. "C-Crete are pioneering significant reductions in the embodied carbon of concrete and their continued research into alternative techniques to avoid over dependence upon a single material source, is both savvy and inspiring.
"C-Crete's sequestration of CO2 into cast-in-place concrete is another aspect with huge potential. The consensus amongst climate scientists is that even if we do everything else right to reduce emissions, the world still needs to remove gigantic amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere. Direct-air capture of CO2 is very expensive currently, so other methods, such as those being developed by C-Crete, are vitally important," says Macalister.
"We need to do testing to get the use of next-generation materials like C-Crete's right, and that requires early adopter field trials," says Donald Davies, a developer and structural engineer with 33 years in the business, whose building in Seattle was the site of C-Crete's first commercial pour. "It's exciting to be a part of helping C-Crete on this important next step forward." Davies is also chair of Building Transparency, a nonprofit dedicated to enabling the building industry to address embodied carbon's role in climate change.
C-Crete Technologies is a leading materials science company committed to inventing, building and scaling up the next generation of infrastructure materials with ultra-low or negative CO2 footprints. With a relentless focus on environmental stewardship and technological innovation, C-Crete aims to address the global challenges of climate change while delivering superior infrastructure materials at scale.
By Denise Brehm
SOURCE C-Crete Technologies
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 💧 Vema Hydrogen Secures $13 Million to Produce Clean Hydrogen Below $1 per Kilogram 🏭 Air Liquide Could Pursue Just Two Out of Six Us Hydrogen Hubs After Trump Halts Funding 🪨 Sc...
Inside This Issue 🏭 Wood Operating Innovative Pilot Carbon Capture Plant in Wyoming 🌍 Tiktok and Two Drifters Secure Carbon Removal for Long-term Economic Gains 🌬️ Hydron Energy Receives Funding S...
Inside This Issue 🤝 Tech Titans and Energy Giants Join Forces to Transform Voluntary Carbon Markets 🌲 How Amazon Approaches Carbon Credits, a Key Tool in the Fight Against Climate Change 💰 Canada ...
Air Liquide Could Pursue Just Two Out of Six Us Hydrogen Hubs After Trump Halts Funding
Feb 21 (Reuters) – France's Air Liquide said on Friday that only two out of their six previously awarded hydrogen projects for the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) might move forward after President...
Pall Corporation and MTR Carbon Capture Partner to Advance Carbon Capture Solutions
This collaboration is designed to help customers accelerate their decarbonization goals Integrates Pall’s advanced flue gas filtration and coalescer technology with MTR’s Polaris™ membrane system ...
Vast Reserves of Game-changing Clean Fuel May Be Hidden Under Mountain Ranges, Scientists Find
Large reserves of white hydrogen may exist within mountain ranges, according to a new study, raising hopes this clean-burning gas can be extracted and supercharge efforts to tackle the climate cris...
Scientists Discover Low-cost Way to Trap Carbon Using Common Rocks
The new process uses heat to transform common minerals into materials that permanently sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide. Stanford Chemists Develop Low-Cost Process for Permanent CO2 Removal S...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.