Meet the Cement Transport Ship that Makes Cement Ingredients While Sailing
UK, JUL 16 – The £60 million funding supports carbon capture to decarbonise 40% of UK cement production and develop CO2 pipeline infrastructure, with shipping emissions targeted for reduction by 2040.
5 Articles
5 Articles


Meet the cement transport ship that makes cement ingredients while sailing
London-based Seabound has developed a carbon capture system that transforms CO2 from a ship's engine into limestone, which Heidelberg Materials will use to make cement.
This cargo ship is turning its CO2 emissions into green cement
A giant cargo ship is trapping carbon from its exhaust and turning it into cement for use in onshore construction. The technology, developed by UK startup Seabound, is billed as the world’s first commercial carbon capture system for boats. It’s installed on the UBC Cork, a cement carrier owned by Germany’s Hartmann Group. “These are the systems we intend to scale across hundreds, and eventually thousands, of vessels,” Alisha Frediksson, Seabound…
Can Oakland firm make cement production greener?
Facing the cancellation of a nine-figure federal award following Donald Trump’s White House return, Oakland-based Brimstone is pressing forward with its plans for low-carbon production of cement and aluminum.
£60m secured to support carbon capture in UK cement industry - East Midlands Business Link
A new carbon capture initiative in the UK’s cement industry has successfully raised £59.6 million in equity funding to help decarbonise up to 40% of the sector. The Peak Cluster project, aimed at reducing carbon emissions from manufacturing sites in Derbyshire and Staffordshire, will utilise this funding to develop a new carbon dioxide transport pipeline. […]
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