Proven strategies, materials, and technologies to reduce the carbon footprint of concrete in 2026
The complete guide to low-carbon concrete options — covering supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs), geopolymer concrete, blended cements, carbon mineralisation, design optimisation, and the latest net-zero concrete pathways available to engineers, specifiers, and contractors in 2026.
A practical 2026 guide for structural engineers, specifiers, contractors, and sustainability managers reducing embodied carbon in concrete structures
Concrete is responsible for approximately 8% of global CO₂ emissions — more than aviation and shipping combined. The majority of this comes from Portland clinker production, which releases approximately 0.83 kg CO₂ per kg of clinker through both fuel combustion and the calcination of limestone. With global concrete production exceeding 14 billion cubic metres annually in 2026, even modest reductions in clinker content per cubic metre translate to enormous absolute carbon savings.
Low-carbon concrete is not a single product but a spectrum of strategies ranging from partial cement replacement with SCMs (achievable today at scale) through to net-zero or carbon-negative geopolymer and mineralised concretes (increasingly commercially available in 2026). Each strategy offers different levels of carbon reduction, different structural performance characteristics, and different cost implications — selecting the right option requires matching the strategy to the application.
In 2026, embodied carbon in construction is subject to mandatory or voluntary reporting requirements in the UK (UKGBC Net Zero Carbon Buildings Framework), Australia (Green Star Buildings v1.3), the EU (Level(s) framework), and many US states. Whole-life carbon assessments are increasingly required for public procurement and infrastructure projects, making concrete carbon literacy an essential skill for every engineer, specifier, and contractor working on projects of any significance.
The most important factor in choosing between low-carbon concrete options is understanding the embodied CO₂ of each binder system relative to standard Portland cement concrete. The chart below compares the typical embodied CO₂ (kg CO₂e per m³ of concrete at 40 MPa equivalent strength) for seven concrete types — from conventional CEM I through to carbon-mineralised and geopolymer concretes available in 2026.
These values represent typical ranges from published Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) and peer-reviewed literature. Actual values vary by source, supply chain, mix design, and geographic location. Always obtain project-specific EPDs from your concrete supplier for use in formal embodied carbon assessments under EN 15804 or ISO 21930 frameworks.
Figure 1 – Typical embodied CO₂ (kg CO₂e/m³) for low-carbon concrete options at approximately 40 MPa compressive strength. Values are indicative based on published EPDs and literature. Actual project values will vary. Source: based on ICE Database v3.0 and fib Bulletin 89 data ranges.
Supplementary cementitious materials are the most widely used and commercially accessible category of low-carbon concrete options in 2026. SCMs partially replace Portland cement clinker in the concrete mix, reducing embodied CO₂ in direct proportion to the clinker replacement level while often improving durability characteristics such as chloride resistance and sulfate attack resistance. The three primary SCMs are fly ash, ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBS), and silica fume.
For structures in aggressive exposure environments — such as those covered in the assessing existing concrete structures guide — SCM-blended concretes often outperform pure CEM I mixes in long-term durability, making them a dual-benefit choice: lower carbon and longer service life. The Portland Cement Association (PCA) publishes extensive technical guidance on SCM performance and mix design optimisation.
A by-product of coal-fired power generation, fly ash (Class F or Class C per ASTM C618 / BS EN 450) replaces 20–40% of Portland cement clinker in standard mixes and up to 60% in specialist high-volume fly ash (HVFA) concretes. Typical CO₂ reduction: 20–40%. Fly ash is pozzolanic — it reacts with calcium hydroxide to form additional CSH gel, improving long-term strength and reducing permeability. Note: availability is declining in Australia and Europe as coal power stations close; plan supply chains carefully in 2026.
A by-product of iron manufacture, GGBS (BS EN 15167 / AS 3582.2) is a latent hydraulic binder that replaces 30–70% of Portland cement. At 70% GGBS replacement, embodied CO₂ falls to approximately 145 kg CO₂e/m³ — a 62% reduction versus CEM I. GGBS significantly improves resistance to chloride ingress, sulfate attack, and alkali-silica reaction, making it particularly effective for marine structures, bridge decks, and basement construction. Slower early strength gain requires extended curing at high replacement levels.
A by-product of silicon metal and ferrosilicon alloy production, silica fume (BS EN 13263 / ASTM C1240) is used at 5–15% replacement levels. Its extremely fine particle size (100× finer than cement) fills capillary pores, dramatically improving concrete density, compressive strength, and chloride resistance. While the absolute CO₂ saving per m³ is lower than GGBS or fly ash due to the smaller replacement level, silica fume enables higher strength with less total binder, reducing CO₂ per unit of structural capacity delivered.
Limestone calcined clay cement (LC3) combines calcined clay with limestone filler to replace up to 50% of Portland clinker, achieving CO₂ reductions of 30–40% with equivalent or superior performance. LC3 is particularly significant because calcined clays are globally abundant — unlike fly ash and GGBS, which are industrial by-products with geographically variable supply. In 2026, LC3 is commercially available in Europe, India, Africa, and is emerging in Australia and Latin America, making it a key future-proof low-carbon binder option.
Natural pozzolans — volcanic ash, diatomite, and calcined metakaolin — and agricultural by-products such as rice husk ash (RHA) provide locally sourced SCM options in regions where industrial by-products are scarce. Metakaolin (calcined kaolin clay) at 10–20% replacement provides excellent pozzolanic reactivity with a CO₂ saving of approximately 10–20% and significant improvement in chloride and acid resistance. RHA contains 85–95% amorphous silica and performs comparably to silica fume when correctly processed.
Replacing Portland cement with SCMs requires careful mix design adjustment. Higher SCM contents reduce early-age strength gain — typically 28-day strengths are met but 7-day strengths may be lower. Minimum curing periods must be extended: BS EN 13670 requires a minimum of 12 days moist curing for GGBS >36% in exposure class XC3/XC4. Water demand may change depending on SCM fineness and form. Always conduct trial mixes and confirm performance to the specified standard before committing to high SCM replacement ratios on structural elements.
Geopolymer concrete eliminates Portland cement entirely, replacing it with an alkali-activated aluminosilicate binder derived from industrial by-products such as fly ash or slag. The result is a concrete with embodied CO₂ typically 40–80% lower than equivalent CEM I concrete — making it one of the most significant low-carbon concrete options commercially available in 2026. Leading ready-mix producers in Australia (Boral, Holcim), the UK (Fortcem), and the USA (PureAsh) now supply geopolymer concrete as a catalogue product.
Geopolymer concrete achieves compressive strengths of 25–80 MPa, has excellent fire resistance (due to the ceramic nature of the geopolymer matrix), and shows superior chemical resistance compared to Portland cement concrete. The primary specification challenge in 2026 remains the absence of a universally adopted design standard — most projects specify to performance requirements rather than prescriptive mix codes, using project-specific testing programmes to demonstrate compliance.
The following table compares all major low-carbon concrete options available in 2026 across the key decision criteria: CO₂ reduction potential, structural performance, cost premium, commercial availability, and applicable design standards. Use this table to shortlist appropriate options for your specific project, then engage your concrete supplier and structural engineer to confirm mix design and compliance pathway.
| Concrete Option | CO₂ Reduction vs CEM I | Strength Range | Cost Premium | Availability 2026 | Key Standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CEM II / 30% Fly Ash Blend | 20–35% | 25–65 MPa | Nil – slight saving | Widely available | BS EN 197-1 / AS 3972 |
| 50% GGBS Blend (CEM III/A) | 35–50% | 25–65 MPa | 0–5% premium | Widely available | BS EN 197-1 / AS 3582 |
| 70% GGBS Blend (CEM III/B) | 50–65% | 25–60 MPa | 3–8% premium | Available (specialist) | BS EN 197-1 / project spec |
| LC3 Limestone Calcined Clay | 30–45% | 25–60 MPa | 5–10% premium | Growing availability | Performance spec / EN 197-5 |
| Geopolymer (Fly Ash Based) | 40–80% | 25–80 MPa | 5–20% premium | Commercial (select regions) | Performance specification |
| Carbon-Mineralised Concrete | Up to 90%+ | 25–60 MPa | 10–25% premium | Emerging commercial | Performance specification |
| Optimised Mix (Reduced Binder) | 10–25% | 25–80 MPa | Nil – cost saving | Universal — any supplier | AS 1379 / BS 8500 |
| High-Volume Fly Ash (HVFA 50–60%) | 35–50% | 25–50 MPa | 0–5% saving | Available (select mixes) | ACI 232.2R / project spec |
Specifying low-carbon concrete options requires coordination between the structural engineer, the concrete specifier, and the ready-mix supplier from the earliest design stage. The following seven-step process ensures that the most carbon-effective option is selected without compromising structural performance, durability, or constructability requirements.
1. Optimise binder content: Every 10 kg/m³ reduction in total cementitious content saves approximately 7–9 kg CO₂e/m³ — achievable through mix design optimisation at zero cost.
2. Specify 50% GGBS for all foundations, ground slabs, and below-ground elements — widely available, zero cost premium, 35–50% CO₂ reduction.
3. Adopt performance-based specification to unlock supplier innovation and allow maximum SCM use within durability constraints.
4. Require EPDs from all concrete suppliers — this single action drives supplier transparency and enables accurate embodied carbon measurement and reporting.
Specifying low-carbon concrete options incorrectly can result in concrete that fails to meet durability requirements, causes construction programme delays, or delivers far less carbon reduction than anticipated. The following warning highlights the most frequently observed errors in low-carbon concrete specification practice encountered in 2026.
The most sustainable concrete structure is one that lasts as long as possible without major repair or replacement — because the embodied carbon of the original structure is amortised over its full service life. High-GGBS and fly ash blended concretes typically provide superior chloride and sulfate resistance, making them ideal for use in the aggressive exposure conditions described in the guide to assessing existing concrete structures. Specifying a low-carbon concrete option that also extends service life by 20–30 years effectively doubles the carbon benefit compared to the immediate embodied CO₂ reduction alone.
How air entrainment works alongside SCM blends to improve durability in low-carbon concrete mixes.
🔍Understanding existing concrete condition to plan low-carbon repair and rehabilitation strategies.
🔊How low-carbon concrete mix designs affect the acoustic properties of floor and slab elements.
🏛️Protecting low-carbon concrete foundations from aggressive ground conditions through correct backfilling.
The PCA publishes comprehensive technical resources on SCM performance, mix design optimisation, and low-carbon concrete pathways including detailed guidance on fly ash, GGBS, silica fume, and emerging binder technologies applicable to 2026 construction projects across North America and internationally.
Visit PCA →Air entrainment and SCM use are complementary strategies in durable, low-carbon concrete mix design. Read the ConcreteMetric guide on air-entrained concrete to understand how entrained air interacts with GGBS and fly ash blends, its effect on workability, strength, and freeze-thaw durability in low-carbon concrete mixes specified in 2026.
Air-Entrained Concrete Guide →Specifying low-carbon concrete for repair and rehabilitation of existing structures requires understanding the existing concrete's condition and chemistry. The ConcreteMetric guide on assessing existing concrete structures covers the inspection and testing methods needed to select the most compatible and carbon-efficient repair concrete for any existing structure in 2026.
Structure Assessment Guide →