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India Cement Sector Eyes EU Decarbonisation Signals

India’s vast cement sector — a backbone of infrastructure and urbanisation — is confronting a new inflection point as Europe’s policymakers and producers outline a structured pathway to slash carbon emissions from cement and concrete. On March 25, the European Commission convened a high‑level policy forum with sector leaders to agree on a roadmap intended to catalyse investment into low‑carbon technologies such as carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS), clinker substitution and more energy‑efficient processes. 

The outcome underlines a broader shift: carbon intensity is fast becoming a determinant of competitiveness for cement exporters globally — including India, whose industry supplies both domestic demand and export markets such as the European Union. Cement production is inherently carbon‑intensive, with chemical process emissions constituting a majority of total CO2 output, a reality that has spurred regulators and industry stakeholders to seek deeper emission reductions. For Indian producers, the timing of Europe’s roadmap intersects with the full implementation of the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) in 2026, which will price embedded emissions for imports including cement. Experts say this reinforces the urgency for Indian firms to embed robust decarbonisation strategies into business planning if they are to sustain export competitiveness. While domestic energy transition has bolstered renewable capacity and improved fuel mix options, the Indian cement sector still relies heavily on fossil fuels and process heat from coal and petcoke — a key driver of manufacturing emissions. A recent decarbonisation roadmap commissioned by India’s government notes that most plants have adopted energy‑efficient dry kilns and blended cement production, yet process emissions remain intrinsic to conventional limestone calcination. 

Industry analysts caution that meeting Europe’s emerging standards — including lifecycle climate impact disclosures and new low‑carbon product labels — may require investments that go beyond incremental efficiency upgrades. Technologies such as CCUS and alternative cement chemistries, while promising, remain capital‑intensive and dependent on supportive regulation and financing mechanisms. Several Indian producers have already begun experimenting with supplementary cementitious materials and higher use of waste fuels, but scaling up low‑carbon processes at the pace signalled by European policy will require coordinated intervention. Senior industry executives suggest that aligning decarbonisation with export strategy could unlock long‑term advantages; without action, export volumes could face carbon pricing penalties or loss of market access under stringent decarbonisation standards abroad.Urban planners and sustainability advocates note that decarbonising cement is crucial not only for trade but also for India’s urban growth and climate commitments. Cement accounts for a notable share of industrial emissions and so reductions can contribute meaningfully to national climate goals while supporting resilient infrastructure. The evolving policy landscape in Europe, therefore, offers both a caution and a catalyst: urging Indian producers to intensify investment in low‑carbon pathways or risk structural disadvantage in global markets.

Looking ahead, industry stakeholders say clearer national incentives for CCUS, green hydrogen, and low‑carbon product standards will be critical to drive decarbonisation at scale — ensuring India’s cement industry remains both resilient and competitive.

Also Read: BMC Cracks Down On Kamala Mills Properties Over Rs 14 Crore Tax Dues

India Cement Sector Eyes EU Decarbonisation Signals
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