ABB and Captimise have enhanced their collaboration, focusing on advancing cost-effective carbon capture, utilisation, and storage (CCUS) technologies in the cement industry. Under a new Memorandum of Understanding, the partnership will develop various studies, including screening, feasibility, and FEED, aiding cement producers to identify efficient carbon capture solutions across their operations. The joint effort is
ABB and Sweden-based Salt X have agreed to develop Electric Arc Calcination (EAC) technology, with ABB also becoming a Salt X minority shareholder. This partnership aims to decarbonise cement production and similar industries by replacing fossil fuel-based heating with renewable energy and CO2 capture during calcination. ABB will enhance the EAC with control and electrical systems,
ABB opened the new ‘Emotion’ multipurpose building at its Untersiggenthal location in an event attended by employees, politicians and the media. The new CHF45 million centre of excellence is ABB’s largest investment in Switzerland in over a decade. Following a two-year construction period, employees from research and development, sales and service, and project management and
Tokuyama Corporation has installed ABB’s Expert Optimizer automated optimisation system in the kiln line of its Nanyo cement plant. The system controls the line’s calciner, kiln and cooler processes. The supplier says that the technology will reduce the Nanyo cement plant’s thermal energy consumption by 3%. Tokuyama Corporation “We selected ABB’s Expert Optimizer to equalise
Max Tschurtschenthaler, ABB, and Joonas Rauramo, Coolbrook, discuss how a pioneering project aimed at replacing fossil fuels with renewable electricity has the potential to slash carbon emissions from cement production and help meet customer demand for CO2-free products. The global cement sector, like so many other energy-intensive industries that produce materials vital to modern