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Research Question
6. Which cement decarbonisation technology pathways are both technically applicable and financially viable under Southern African operating conditions, and what does this mean for investment prioritisation
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Related Academic Papers
2 papers found relevant to this research question. Each paper is scored by how closely it relates to the question.
Ibrahim Muhammad Duze Lawal, Francis Simon Machango, Aneth Nemes Mworia (2025)
Why this paper is relevant
A case study of cement decarbonization in Tanzania using emerging energy solutions, providing comparative context for Southern Africa.
Danyang Cheng, David Reiner, Fan Yang, Can Cui, Jing Meng, Yuli Shan, Yunhui Liu, Shu Tao, Dabo Guan (2023)
Abstract
Abstract Achieving low-carbon development of the cement industry in the developing countries is fundamental to global emissions abatement, considering the local construction industry’s rapid growth. However, there is currently a lack of systematic and accurate accounting and projection of cement emissions in developing countries, which are characterized with lower basic economic country condition. Here, we provide bottom-up quantifications of emissions from global cement production and reveal a regional shift in the main contributors to global cement CO 2 emissions. The study further explores cement emissions over 2020-2050 that correspond to different housing and infrastructure conditions and emissions mitigation options for all developing countries except China. We find that cement emissions in developing countries except China will reach 1.4-3.8 Gt in 2050 (depending on different industrialization trajectories), compared to their annual emissions of 0.7 Gt in 2018. The optimal combination of low-carbon measures could contribute to reducing annual emissions by around 65% in 2050 and cumulative emissions by around 48% over 2020-2050. The efficient technological paths towards a low carbon future of cement industry vary among the countries and infrastructure scenarios. Our results are essential to understanding future emissions patterns of the cement industry in the developing countries and can inform policies in the cement sector that contribute to meeting the climate targets set out in the Paris Agreement.
Why this paper is relevant
Projects future carbon emissions from cement production specifically focusing on the challenges developing countries face in implementing mitigation strategies.
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