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Next-generation lower carbon concrete using Australian calcined clay undergoes technical feasibility in two-year project by Boral, industry and researchers

Eco Voice
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First published in 2003, Eco Voice is your go-to publication for sustainability news in Australia. Eco Voice prides itself as an independent news platform with a clear focus on sustainability, with articles coming from a diverse range of contributors – all levels of government, corporations, not-for-profits, community groups, small to medium sized businesses, universities, research organisations, together with input from international sources. Eco Voice values community, conservation and commerce. Eco Voice is a media partner of the prestigious Australian Banksia Sustainability Awards – The Peak Sustainability Awards.

Leading construction materials company Boral Limited (Boral), in partnership with industry players and researchers, is developing a lower carbon concrete product using Australian calcined clay as an alternative supplementary cementitious material (SCM).

The innovative solution aims to ensure the ongoing supply of Boral’s lower carbon concrete offering, given the abundance of clay and the global supply of blast furnace slag and fly ash limited and expected to decline.

Boral has partnered with the University of Technology Sydney (UTS)Transport for NSW, and environmental technology company Calix, as part of a project supported by SmartCrete CRC, an independent cooperative research centre (CRC) that brings together collaborators from industry, research and government to ensure the viability of Australia’s concrete infrastructure.

The two-year project, co-funded through the Commonwealth’s CRC Program, aims to further demonstrate the technical feasibility of calcined clay concrete for use in Australian buildings and infrastructure. The partners – comprising suppliers, university researchers, asset owners and providers – will work on accelerated lab testing and field trials as part of the validation stage.

A first batch of Boral clay has been successfully calcined by Calix’s unique renewably powered electric calcination technology, demonstrating the potential of the approach to produce a low carbon intensity SCM.

The project follows extensive research and development at the UTS Boral Centre for Sustainable Building carried out over the past three years whereby the suitability of a number of Australian clay sources were identified.

Vik Bansal, CEO and Managing Director at Boral, says: “Boral is committed to a lower carbon future and we never stand still. We are continuously improving and diversifying our lower carbon concrete offering by identifying new ways to reduce the cementitious intensity of our products.

“The strong demand and take-up of our lower carbon concrete range can be seen across many major Australian buildings and construction projects which use our Envisia and Envirocrete products. We are excited about the next generation of work being done in lower carbon concrete and Boral’s ability to support the decarbonisation of Australia’s building and infrastructure for many years to come.”

Dr Ali Nezhad, Head of Sustainability and Innovation at Boral and Boral lead on the calcined clay project, says: “It’s an exciting time to be at the forefront of the research and development being done on lower carbon concrete. The industry is constantly looking for ways to innovate, push the boundaries and find ways to be more sustainable. Given the abundance of clay in Australia, using Australian calcined clay was a natural decision for us.

“We have been impressed with the work done to date and initial testing in this project is promising. We look forward to the building and construction industry in Australia embracing these new innovations.”

About Boral

Boral is the largest vertically-integrated construction materials company in Australia.

Our network includes prized quarry and cement infrastructure, bitumen, construction materials recycling, asphalt and concrete batching operations.

We employ about 7,500 employees and contractors across our operations that span more than 360 sites nation-wide.

For more than 75 years we’ve been building something great in Australia – rarely a day goes by that you wouldn’t pass one of our sites or trucks, enter a building, use a road, bridge, tunnel, footpath or other critical infrastructure that our people and products have helped enable.

 

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