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India Cement Sector Drives Deep Decarbonisation Strategy

India’s cement industry — a cornerstone of the nation’s infrastructure and urban growth — is entering a decisive phase in its climate transition as policymakers and industrial leaders explore technology, regulation and market mechanisms to shrink one of the country’s largest industrial emission footprints. Accounting for roughly 6% of national CO₂ emissions, the sector’s climate performance will shape how India meets its net-zero by 2070 goals while pursuing ambitious urbanisation and housing agendas.

Cement production in India is “hard to abate”: more than half of emissions stem from the calcination process — a necessary chemical transformation of limestone into clinker, cement’s primary binding ingredient — which itself releases CO₂ that cannot simply be eliminated by switching to clean energy. On top of that, 30–35% of emissions arise from fossil fuel combustion to fire kilns at extremely high temperatures.These dynamics pose a structural challenge for industry planners and urban policymakers, because growing demand — driven by massive infrastructure programmes, urban expansion and residential construction — continues to collide with sustainability expectations from investors and global supply chains.To address this, a multi-pronged approach is emerging that spans production and demand levers. On the supply side, reducing the clinker factor — the proportion of clinker in cement — is seen as the single most impactful lever for cutting emissions. India’s clinker ratio has traditionally hovered above the global average, but a shift toward blended cements using supplementary materials like fly ash, ground granulated blast-furnace slag and limestone calcined clay (LC3) presents a tangible emissions reduction pathway of 30–40%.

Lower clinker cement blends are already gaining traction in pilot projects and select infrastructure builds, offering a proof of concept for broader industrial adoption. Meanwhile, optimising energy use — including through waste heat recovery systems, renewable electricity integration and more efficient kiln technologies — promises both environmental and cost benefits, although high upfront capital requirements remain a barrier for many plants.At the policy level, India’s emerging Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and recently notified Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity Target Rules 2025 mark a shift from voluntary initiatives to measurable compliance frameworks. These rules aim to anchor emission intensity reduction targets for major cement facilities, linking performance with tradable credits and potential penalties — a regulatory nudge essential for long-term transformation.

Still, analysts caution that current incentives and regulatory frameworks must expand beyond baseline targets to catalyse capital flows into cleaner manufacturing technologies. Robust green public procurement policies, fiscal incentives for alternative fuel adoption, and streamlined approvals for carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) could help unlock broader decarbonisation at scale.For Indian cities and infrastructure planners, these shifts are more than compliance exercises. Cement’s embedded carbon affects lifecycle emissions of buildings, bridges, metros and affordable housing — and lowering that footprint delivers long-term climate resilience and future-proofs public investment.

As India navigates between growth, equity and climate goals, the cement sector’s transition will be a bellwether for how high-emission industries can modernise in a way that supports sustainable urbanisation and economic opportunity.

Also Read: India Cement Sector Engages Global Climate Dialogue

India Cement Sector Drives Deep Decarbonisation Strategy
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