HeidelbergCement is advancing the development of innovative technologies to reduce CO² emissions. After very good results from the first phase of the project, the company is starting the further development and scale-up of the LEILAC technology (Low Emissions Intensity Lime And Cement) together with the Australian technology company Calix and a European consortium. The patented LEILAC process makes it possible to capture high-purity CO² from cement production via a separate exhaust gas stream and to utilize it for other purposes. Two-thirds of the CO² emissions of a cement plant are process-related emissions generated during the heating of limestone and are therefore unavoidable.

“The LEILAC 2 project is an important element of our sustainability strategy. It shows that it is possible to significantly reduce the ecological footprint of cement production,” says Dr. Dominik von Achten, Chairman of the Managing Board of HeidelbergCement.

Central aspects of the LEILAC 2 project are the further scale-up of the technology to an industrial level, the full
process integration into an existing cement plant, and the heat supply of the plant from renewable energies for climate-neutral CO² separation.

Like its predecessor LEILAC 1, the LEILAC 2 project is based on Calix’s innovative calcination technology and is supported with 16 million euros from the EU research funding programme Horizon 2020. As part of LEILAC 1, a CO² separation pilot plant with a capacity of 25,000 tonnes per year was constructed at the HeidelbergCement plant in Lixhe, Belgium. In LEILAC 2, a plant around four times this size is to be operated in a HeidelbergCement plant in Western Europe, which has yet to be determined. The project, including planning, construction, commissioning and extensive test runs, is scheduled to be completed by 2025.

HeidelbergCement is a global leader in the development of innovative technologies for CO² separation and use. In addition to LEILAC, the company is involved in a large number of other research projects – such as the “Northern Lights” project in Norway, or the German “Catch 4 Climate” project with cement industry partners.

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