The project is so far on track with delivering the expected impact as described below:
i) Reduction potential of at least 30% of primary raw material use per ton of main high-volume final product
The technologies being developed show the potential to substitute cement clinker at levels of 30% with modified BR, a currently unused industrial by-product.
ii) Reduction of waste generation by at least 25%
The European clinker production in 2017 was 175 Mt, with a 30% substitution rate, this allows for more than 50 Mt of BR to be used each year in cement, i.e. surpassing the annual EU production of BR by 7 times. ReActiv can effectively achieve the 100% reduction of solid waste generation in the European Alumina sector. So this impact remains on track.
iii) Significant energy savings and reductions in CO2 emissions (including through a higher share of renewable energy) in the overall sustainable production lines in which the technology is fully integrated.
The CO2 emissions avoidance through clinker substitution is well documented and is further quantified in ReActiv, with extensive LCA/LCC of the new ReActiv processing technologies that will produce the new BR SCMs and new cement products.
Iv) Contribution to new standards for the use of secondary materials for new products
Initial work under this impact has begun within the project.
v) Replication potential
The ReActiv consortium represents 77% of the total European alumina production ensuring replication first by the project partners themselves. The replication of the ReActiv process is expected to snowball beyond Europe given the multinational nature of the industrial partners involved. LH has 270 cement plants around the world, while ALCOA operates alumina plants in Brazil, Australia and Saudi Arabia, RUSAL in Russia, Ukraine, Guinea, Australia, and Jamaica, RT in Australia and Canada, HYDRO in Brazil. Furthermore, European and International dissemination of project results will take place through the European Aluminium Association and the International Aluminium Institute, which are partners in the ReActiv consortium.