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Novel concrete reduces impact of both coal ash and cement

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27 May, 2024

This post was originally published on Sustainability Matters

The coal ash produced by coal-fired power plants in Australia accounts for nearly a fifth of the nation’s waste and will remain abundant for decades to come, even with the transition to renewables. More than 1.2 billion tonnes of coal ash were produced by coal-fired power plants in 2022.

The production of cement, which uses some coal ash as an ingredient, makes up 8% of global carbon emissions. Demand for concrete — of which cement is a key component — is growing rapidly.

Researchers at RMIT might have now found a solution to both problems, with the development of a low-carbon concrete that can recycle double the amount of coal ash compared to current standards, halve the amount of cement required and perform well over time.

The RMIT team: Dr Yuguo Yu, Professor Sujeeva Setunge, Dr Dilan Robert, Dr Chamila Gunasekara and Dr David Law. Image credit: Michael Quin, RMIT.

The engineers at RMIT partnered with AGL’s Loy Yang Power Station and the Ash Development Association of Australia to substitute 80% of the cement in concrete with coal fly ash. RMIT project lead Dr Chamila Gunasekara said this represents a significant advance as existing low-carbon concretes typically have no more than 40% of their cement replaced with fly ash.

“Our addition of nano additives to modify the concrete’s chemistry allows more fly ash to be added without compromising engineering performance,” said Gunasekara, from RMIT’s School of Engineering.

Lab studies have shown the team’s approach is also capable of harvesting and repurposing lower-grade and underutilised ‘pond ash’ — taken from coal slurry storage ponds at power plants — with minimal pre-processing.

Large concrete beam prototypes have been created using both fly ash and pond ash and shown to meet Australian Standards for engineering performance and environmental requirements.

“It’s exciting that preliminary results show similar performance with lower-grade pond ash, potentially opening a whole new hugely underutilised resource for cement replacement,” Gunasekara said, adding that there are hundreds of megatonnes of ash waste sitting in dams around Australia, and much more globally.

“These ash ponds risk becoming an environmental hazard, and the ability to repurpose this ash in construction materials at scale would be a massive win,” he said.

New modelling technology shows low-carbon concrete’s long-term resilience

In addition to creating the novel concrete, RMIT has developed a pilot computer-modelling program in partnership with Hokkaido University’s Dr Yogarajah Elakneswaran that can forecast how the new concrete mixtures will perform over time.

“We’ve now created a physics-based model to predict how the low-carbon concrete will perform over time, which offers us opportunities to reverse-engineer and optimise mixes from numerical insights,” explained Dr Yuguo Yu, an expert in virtual computational mechanics at RMIT.

“The inclusion of ultrafine nano additives significantly enhances the material by increasing density and compactness.”

This modelling, with its applicability to various materials, marks a critical step towards digitally assisted simulation in infrastructure design and construction. The team aims to use the technology to instil confidence among local councils and communities in adopting novel low-carbon concrete for various applications.

The team’s work has most recently been published in the journal Cement and Concrete Research.

Top image: Dr Chamila Gunasekara holds a sample of the low-carbon concrete. Image credit: Michael Quin, RMIT.

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Insurance sector digs into impact of mandatory climate reporting

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Businesses are being encouraged to prepare for the impact of mandatory climate disclosure in Australia.

Earlier this year, the federal government passed amendments to the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth), resulting in mandatory climate reporting for larger businesses in Australia.

The issue was examined during a recent address to members of the Underwriting Agencies Council, with particular attention paid to how the new legislation will affect the insurance sector.

Speaking at the event, Prateek Vijayvergia, Xceedance Business Leader – Key Accounts, Australia and New Zealand, said that while 75% of ASX 200 companies were committed to or already performing climate reporting, the number fell to 10.5% for broader ASX companies.

“There’s a lot more awareness and commitment and urgency that we see in the Australian market now and this is not limited only to the insurance business, but for all larger Australian businesses,” he said.

“Although this is all good, there is a gap in climate-related reporting among ASX-listed entities, and the depth and the quantification.”

Joining Vijayvergia in the discussion was Sharanjit Paddam, Principal – Climate Analytics at Finity Consulting, who said that from 31 December 2025, in addition to an Annual Report, large companies will need to submit a Sustainability Report — what Paddam referred to as “the home for ESG disclosures”.

Four pillars underpin the disclosure standards — governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets. Paddam emphasised that the devil is in the detail.

“You not only have to disclose the financial impacts on your balance sheet today and your income statement today, but also in the short-, medium- and long-term future,” he said.

“They (ASIC and APRA) want hard numbers to be put in the accounts about how climate change is financially going to affect the operations of the company.”

Paddam explained: “At the heart of the disclosure is really what are the financial impacts of climate change on your company, investors, customers and shareholders; to understand that and to allocate capital and make investment decisions informed by how climate change might affect your business.”

Paddam added that companies need to consider their own impact on climate change.

“The world is changing in disclosures in a very big way over the next few years, and companies are going to have to think about not just accounting for their financial outcomes, but also their climate outcomes,” he said.

“These are mandatory standards — this is locked in, and it will be required to happen over the next few years, and it is intended that these standards will change the economy and they will drive changes throughout the way we do business.”

A particular challenge will be the reporting of Scope 3 emissions — those indirectly generated by the activities of an organisation — due to lack of data, methodology and resources.

“What’s really helping all of us is the advancement in technology so there are better ways of collecting information and data around emissions,” Vijayvergia said.

“And also, to then slice and dice that information so it can be used to make a plan around climate risk.

“It’s becoming more comprehensive and almost integral to the overall reporting that’s happening for an organisation.”

Organisations impacted by these legislative changes include those that produce accounts under the Corporations Act and meet any two of the following criteria: consolidated assets more than $25m; consolidated revenue more than $50m; or 100 or more employees.

Paddam said the new requirements would capture some of the larger underwriting agencies and brokers.

“It’s an opportunity to look at the services that you are providing and how good a partner you are for your insurance provider, or as a distributor of insurance products, to see where you could uplift your services in this respect,” he advised.

“The things we insure, the things we invest in, are all intended to change as a result of these disclosures, and getting your heads around that quicker and faster than your competition is very important.”

Image credit: iStock.com/pcess609

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The post World Water Film Festival Opens in New York, Aims to Inspire appeared first on EcoWatch.

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