Worldwide, the amount of cement being used for every person in the world has nearly tripled in the past 45 years and demand is projected to increase over 33% by 2050. This demand is driving an exponential growth in cement production - and 'clinker', a key binding agent that averages around 75% of cement (but can make up to 95% of the content of Ordinary Portland Cement). To make clinker, limestone and clay are heated to around 1450c, creating a chemical reaction that forms ‘clinker’. To generate this heat, the industry generally burns fossil fuels - although alternatives exist. Burning the fuel emits an average of 33% of the clinker CO2 footprint, with the remainder (67%) emitted by the chemical reaction of the heated limestone. Clinker is responsible for 94% of the total CO2 footprint of cement. In total, the cement industry has reduced its reliance on fossil fuels to heat clinker by 22% from 98% in 1990 to 76% in 2023, with post-use mixed waste and biomass increasing their share as alternative fuels. This concrete progress has helped reduce the carbon intensity of the fuel mix by 8% between 1990 and 2023. Unfortunately, this reduction has been outstripped by increases in cement production overall since 1990, so total fossil fuel consumption has actually increased by 100 million gigajoules (GJ), from 1.78bn GJ in 1990 to 1.88bn GJ in 2023.
(Except where specified, figures are sourced from the GCCA, Getting the Numbers Right Project, Emissions Report 2023 - for External Stakeholders industry-reported dataset)
Cementing coal use
Today, 49% of the heat needed to make clinker is generated by burning coal. Consequently, the cement industry consumes around 4% of global coal produced, which amounts to approximately 330 million tonnes of coal per year. UK Government research and commercial examples from around the world indicate that the elimination of fossil fuels in cement production is possible. Thermal coal is the most common fuel burned to produce the high heat required.
Successful, at-scale, examples already exist of cement works burning 100% fuel alternatives to traditional fossil fuels, including pilot projects using combinations of hydrogen and biomass (UK) and hydrogen and electricity (Sweden). Yet, innovations such as use of hydrogen and kiln electrification are forecast to play only a small role, providing 10% of energy needs by 2050. Worldwide, only 24% of cement in 2023 was produced using alternative fuels, with 76% of cement produced using fossil fuels (37% of cement overall is heated using coal). The continuing reliance on burning fossil fuels to generate heat at cement works contributes to its high CO2 footprint – particularly its upstream footprint due to the resources and methane emissions associated with mining coal. Globally, the cement industry is responsible for up to 8% of CO2 emissions (but only 1.5% of UK CO2 emissions) – nearly as much as steel.
Coal-free fuel examples from around the world:
Holcim’s cement works in Saint-Pierre-la-Cour, France, uses a combination of calcined clay to reduce clinker content required in the cement, and biofuels and waste heat recovery systems to heat the remaining clinker required. This combination has displaced 100% of fossil fuels from its calcined clay cement production process to deliver up to 500,000 tonnes a year. This cement works received funding from France’s ‘France Relance’ industrial decarbonisation fund.

Holcim’s cement works in Retznei, Austria, used alternative fuel in 96% of its fuel mix last year – virtually eradicating fossil fuels from its operations – and is working towards 100%.

JK Cement’s cement works in Muddapur, Karnataka, India, has increased its use of alternative fuels to 78%, and is completing the installation of a waste heat recovery system, which it expects to make the cement works 100% fossil fuel-free.

Huaxin, a global cement producer headquartered in Wuhan, China, has reached 40% and 60% alternative fuels (mainly refuse-derived fuels) at its Diwei Chongqing (2,500 tonne/day) and Huangshi cement works, respectively. In developing economies, certain alternative fuels are highly variable in materials and moister content, resulting in heating fluctuations that challenges consistent quality in clinker production. At Huangshi cement works, Huaxin uses AI and other technologies to adjust production processes in real-time response to changing fuel properties, allowing it to create consistent clinker quality.

Globally, the clinker ratio to cement (Portland and blended) has reduced from 78% in 2012 to 75% in 2023. The use of clinker substitutes has correspondingly increased by 12.7 million tonnes between 1990 and 2023, but much of this increase may be accounted for by the overall growth in cement production. Although most ‘green cement’ works around the world substitute up to 40% of clinker, there is at least one commercial example of a cement works substituting up to 100% of the clinker in their cement production. The use of alternative cementious materials reduce, or even eliminate the needs for clinker. Unlike clinker, these alternative cementious materials don’t require as much, or any, heating – thereby reducing the amount of coal burned. Some of these materials, such as the coal by-products of fly-ash and blast furnace slag, are in increasingly short supply as economies decarbonise. However, other clinker substitutes such as burnt rice husks do not face supply issues, and a lack of acceptance by the construction sector continues to be the most limiting factor in producing more cement with a lower clinker content. One solution to this would be Government mandating that publicly-funded construction projects must use entirely or partially ‘low carbon’ cement products where clinker substitutes have been included.
Clinker substitution examples from around the world:
Hoffmann Green cement works in Bournezeau, France, has a capacity to produce 50,000 tonnes of three varieties of cement per year, all with 0% clinker content. This cement works replaces clinker with a mix of slag, clay, gypsum – supplied by local producers. It also removes the need for further extraction, unlike clinker which requires quarrying limestone. This cement works received funding from France’s ‘France Relance’ industrial decarbonisation fund.

US start-up, Sublime Systems has developed a new 0% clinker cement using calcium silicates and other commonly used substitutes in an electrochemical reactor, which requires heating only to 100c. Its pilot cement works only has capacity to produce a few hundred tonnes of cement per year, but it is developing a new cement works with capacity for up to 25,000 tonnes per year by 2026.

CRH’s Jura cement works in Wildegg, Switzerland, uses calcined clay to produce a cement with a clinker factor lower than 65%, with potential for further reductions. One tonne of calcined clay replaces on average 0.75 tonne of clinker, thereby saving more than 0.25 tonne of CO2. The resulting cement contains approximately 20% less CO2 per m3 compared to ordinary Portland cement.

In contrast to worldwide trends, UK cement production has been in decline since a peak in the 1970s, and roughly halving since 1990. Despite this decline, the UK cement industry still burned just under 400,000* tonnes of coal to make 7.3 million tonnes of cement in 2024 – averaging roughly 1 tonne of coal for every 18 tonnes of cement. To put that into context, around 8,000 tonnes of cement is needed for a new hospital, while between 3-5 tonnes are needed to build a four-bedroom family house.
*There is no cement-specific coal consumption statistics available, but the UK Government reported that 395,000 tonnes of coal were used in the minerals industry in 2024, the vast majority of which would be cement.
At the moment, there are isolated examples of cement works around the world that operate entirely without burning coal or fossil fuels. Yet all large UK cement works continue relying on coal and fossil fuels. The £3.2 million public fund to research pathways to decarbonise UK cement making is welcome, but to get value for money, proven pathways must be implemented at commercial cement works.
Carbon Capture & Storage - risks:
There is also a proposal to create a CCS network (Peak Valley Cluster), funded in part by the new UK National Wealth Fund. The CCS project would aim to reduce CO2 emissions from several cement works in Derbyshire and Staffordshire. But the high-risk CCS technology is an extremely expensive decarbonisation pathway, with high construction and running costs. The UK Government pledged an eye-watering £22 billion from 2025, driving even more households into fuel poverty (currently 11% of UK households struggle in energy poverty). Given the many £billions poured into the technology around the world, it has a disastrous global track-record of cancellations, suspensions soon after operating, and under-performance of up to 50%. Crucially, CCS will also do nothing to remove coal from the cement-making process, failing to reduce any upstream emissions or harms associated with coal mining and resource extraction in the supply chain. Investment in CCS is investment diverted from eliminating our use of fossil fuels, thereby prolonging our reliance on them.
The steel industry produces 9-11% of the annual CO2 emitted globally, contributing significantly to climate change. In 2024, on average, every tonne of steel produced led to the emission of 2.2 tonnes of CO2e (scope 1, 2, and 3). Globally in 2024, 1,886 million tonnes (Mt) of steel were produced, emitting…
Last month we worked with Members of Parliament from various parties on a Westminster Hall debate about coal tip safety and the prohibition of new coal extraction licences. The debate happened 59 years and one day after the Aberfan tragedy which killed 116 children and 28 adults…
Successful, at-scale, examples already exist of cement works burning 100% fuel alternatives to traditional fossil fuels, including pilot projects using combinations of hydrogen and biomass (UK) and hydrogen and electricity (Sweden). Yet, innovations such as use of hydrogen and kiln electrification are…
Within the borders of the Senedd Caerphilly constituency is the proposed Bedwas coal tips re-mining project. In the lead up to the Senedd by-election, Coal Action Network has carried out a survey of the by-election candidates asking for their views about the re-mining of the Bedwas and other…
In 2019, Bryn Bach Coal Ltd applied to expand its Glan Lash opencast coal mine and extend the amount of time it would continue mining coal for. The proposal would see the coal mine swallowing a nearby ancient woodland, hedgerows, and grassland. The proposal was rejected by Carmarthenshire County Council in 2023…
In November 2024, the UK Government announced its commitment to legislating a ban of new coal mining licences. This was a commitment that Coal Action Network had secured a manifesto commitment from the Government for, along with four other major parties…
Coal Action Network has obtained new legal advice from expert Barristers Estelle Dehon (KC) and Rowan Clapp of Cornerstone Chambers, London. Examining relevant…
On July 1st, 2025, CAN organised drop-in session at the Senedd, spotlighting the urgent need for action on Wales’ coal legacy issues. The event saw strong cross-party engagement, with Members of the Senedd (MSs)…
We’re actively setting the record straight when fake news about coal is spread through public figures, social media, or the press. The rise of populist politics and politicians tend to drive statements that are don’t entirely match the evidence, but may win them some votes…