On 18 April 2024, the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) and the Policy Research Institute for Equitable Development (PRIED) launched two studies focusing on the decarbonisation of Pakistan’s cement sector. The initiative focuses on collaboration and technology sharing to reduce the industry’s carbon footprint.
Professor Muhammad Fahim Khokhar from the National University of Science and Technology (NUST) said “The global CO₂ emissions released from the cement sector are 37.4Gt, which is rising at 1.1% per year.”
The study by PRIED and NUST on decarbonisation showed a 30% increase in cement sector CO₂ emissions in 2020 relative to 1990-2000, reaching 49.6Mt/yr. The study proposed strategies for cement sector decarbonisation, such as alternative fuels, clinker substitution, renewable energy, process electrification, energy efficiency and carbon capture technologies.
According to researcher Saleha Qureshi, the major challenge for decarbonisation is that cement industries in Pakistan rely on over 65% coal in the calcination process. Other challenges identified were lack of regulatory and policy support, absence of performance-based standards, high transition cost and limited incentive available for the transition.