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| More than 76 billion tons of cement was produced around the world between 1930 and 2013. |
During the manufacture of cement, carbon dioxide is emitted
when limestone is converted to lime under heat in a process called calcination.
But as cement ages and weathers over time, it also absorbs
carbon dioxide in a process called carbonation.
In a paper published today in Nature Geoscience, a team of
researchers calculated that the carbonation process has offset as much as 43
per cent of the emissions associated with cement production, not including the
emissions associated with fossil fuel use during cement production, over the
past 70 years.
Read the ABC story
by Bianca Nogrady - “Concrete products reabsorb nearly half CO2 released in cement manufacture.”

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