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Concrete Carbon Reduction Strategies – Complete Guide 2026 | ConcreteMetric
Sustainable Concrete Guide 2026

Concrete Carbon Reduction Strategies – Complete Guide

Practical strategies to reduce embodied carbon in concrete — from mix design and SCMs to procurement, carbon capture, and whole-life assessment

A comprehensive guide to concrete carbon reduction strategies for 2026. Covers embodied carbon benchmarks, SCM substitution rates, low-carbon cement types, mix optimisation, Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs), carbon capture in concrete, and how to implement a carbon reduction plan on real projects.

Embodied Carbon
SCM Strategies
Low-Carbon Cement
EPDs & Reporting

🌿 Concrete Carbon Reduction Strategies

Concrete is responsible for approximately 8% of global CO₂ emissions — and the construction industry in 2026 has practical, proven tools to cut that figure significantly on every project

✔ Why Concrete Carbon Matters

Portland cement clinker production is one of the most carbon-intensive industrial processes on Earth, releasing approximately 0.83 kg CO₂ per kg of clinker through both the calcination of limestone (process emissions ~60%) and the combustion of fossil fuels for kiln heat (~40%). Globally, cement production accounts for roughly 4 billion tonnes of CO₂ annually — approximately 8% of total anthropogenic emissions. With concrete being the most-used construction material in the world, reducing its carbon intensity is one of the highest-impact actions available to the construction industry in the transition to net zero.

✔ Embodied Carbon vs Operational Carbon

Carbon in the built environment divides into two categories. Operational carbon is the CO₂ emitted during a building's use — heating, cooling, lighting — and has been the primary focus of building energy codes for decades. Embodied carbon is the CO₂ emitted during the manufacture, transport, construction, maintenance, and end-of-life of building materials — including concrete. As buildings become more energy-efficient, embodied carbon now represents 50–70% of a new building's whole-life carbon footprint, making concrete carbon reduction a critical priority for achieving net-zero buildings in 2026 and beyond.

✔ The Carbon Reduction Hierarchy

Effective concrete carbon reduction follows a clear priority hierarchy: (1) Reduce — use less concrete through structural optimisation and right-sizing of elements; (2) Replace — substitute Portland cement with supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) such as fly ash, GGBFS, and silica fume; (3) Reuse — design for deconstruction and reuse of concrete elements; (4) Recycle — incorporate recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) and recycled materials; (5) Offset — use carbon capture technologies and offset mechanisms as a last resort. The greatest carbon reductions in 2026 come from the first two strategies.

Embodied Carbon in Concrete — Key Benchmarks

Understanding the baseline embodied carbon of standard concrete mixes is the starting point for any carbon reduction strategy. Embodied carbon in concrete is measured in kg CO₂-equivalent per cubic metre (kg CO₂e/m³) or per tonne of concrete and is documented through Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) — third-party verified documents that report the life cycle assessment (LCA) results for a specific concrete product. The World Green Building Council's Embodied Carbon Net Zero framework provides international guidance on embodied carbon reduction targets for the construction sector.

🌿 Embodied Carbon Reference Values — Concrete 2026

Portland cement clinker: ~0.83 kg CO₂e per kg clinker produced
Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC): ~0.82–0.93 kg CO₂e per kg cement
Standard 32 MPa concrete (OPC only): ~300–380 kg CO₂e per m³
Standard 25 MPa concrete (OPC only): ~240–310 kg CO₂e per m³
Fly ash (Class F) embodied carbon: ~0.004–0.01 kg CO₂e per kg
GGBFS embodied carbon: ~0.05–0.08 kg CO₂e per kg
Silica fume embodied carbon: ~0.01–0.02 kg CO₂e per kg
Carbon saving: replace 1 kg OPC with fly ash → save ~0.82 kg CO₂e

🌿 Concrete Carbon Intensity — Strategy Impact Zones

380+ kg CO₂e/m³
High Strength OPC
No SCMs — Baseline
280–380 kg CO₂e/m³
Standard OPC
25–32 MPa
180–280 kg CO₂e/m³
20–35% SCM
Partial Replacement
100–180 kg CO₂e/m³
40–60% SCM
Low Carbon Mix
<100 kg CO₂e/m³
Ultra-Low Carbon
Geopolymer / CCU
Lever 1 Structural
optimisation
Lever 2 SCM cement
replacement
Lever 3 Low-carbon
cement types
Lever 4 Carbon capture
& mineralisation

Concrete carbon intensity ranges from over 380 kg CO₂e/m³ for high-strength OPC-only mixes down to under 100 kg CO₂e/m³ for ultra-low carbon geopolymer and carbon-utilisation concrete — each reduction lever compounds the savings of the previous one.

Strategy 1 — Supplementary Cementitious Materials (SCMs)

Replacing Portland cement with supplementary cementitious materials is the single most accessible and cost-effective concrete carbon reduction strategy available in 2026. SCMs are industrial by-products with embedded carbon far lower than Portland cement — replacing just 30% of OPC with fly ash reduces the concrete's embodied carbon by approximately 25–28% with no change to structural performance at 90-day strength. For a full technical overview of SCM properties and dosage guidance, see our Concrete Additives & Admixtures Guide.

🏭 Fly Ash — Low Cost, High Volume

Class F fly ash is the most widely available and cost-effective SCM for carbon reduction in concrete. At replacement rates of 20–35% by cement mass, fly ash reduces embodied carbon by 17–29% relative to OPC-only concrete. It also improves workability, reduces heat of hydration in mass concrete pours, and enhances sulfate resistance. The carbon intensity of fly ash is approximately 0.004–0.010 kg CO₂e/kg — roughly 80–100× lower than Portland cement. Supply constraints are emerging in some markets as coal power stations close, making early procurement planning critical for high-volume fly ash projects in 2026.

🏗️ GGBFS — High Replacement Rates

Ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBFS) can replace Portland cement at rates of 40–70% in concrete mixes without compromising long-term structural performance — the highest replacement rate of any common SCM. At 50% GGBFS substitution, embodied carbon is reduced by approximately 35–40% compared to an OPC-only equivalent. GGBFS also dramatically reduces chloride diffusivity, making it the preferred SCM for marine and coastal structures. Its embodied carbon of ~0.05–0.08 kg CO₂e/kg reflects the energy required for grinding — still approximately 10× lower than Portland cement per kilogram.

💎 Silica Fume — High Performance, Low Volume

Silica fume is used at low replacement rates (5–10% by cement mass) and therefore contributes less absolute carbon reduction than fly ash or GGBFS, but its ultra-high reactivity enables significant reductions in the total cement content of high-strength concrete mixes by allowing the water-cement ratio to be reduced. In high-strength concrete (HSC) over 65 MPa, silica fume replacement combined with a superplasticiser can reduce total binder content by 10–15% while maintaining or exceeding strength targets — a form of indirect carbon reduction through mix efficiency.

🌾 Emerging SCMs — Calcined Clays and RHA

Calcined clay (LC³ — Limestone Calcined Clay Cement) and rice husk ash (RHA) are among the most promising emerging SCMs for carbon reduction in 2026, particularly in regions where fly ash and GGBFS supply is limited. LC³ technology combines calcined low-grade kaolinite clay (50%) with limestone filler (30%) and clinker (20%) to produce a cement with 40% lower CO₂ emissions than OPC, using widely available raw materials. Rice husk ash (RHA) offers silica fume-comparable performance at lower cost in rice-producing countries. Both are commercially available but not yet produced at the scale of fly ash or GGBFS globally.

Strategy 2 — Structural Optimisation and Mix Efficiency

The most carbon-efficient concrete is the concrete that is never produced. Structural optimisation — designing structural elements to use the minimum volume of concrete consistent with structural adequacy — is a carbon reduction strategy that requires no change to material specifications and produces no cost premium. In 2026, digital structural analysis tools enable engineers to refine member sizes, remove unnecessary concrete mass, and target concrete grades more precisely to load demands.

📐 Right-Size Concrete Grades

Specifying concrete at a higher strength grade than structural calculations require is a common and costly practice — higher grade mixes contain more cement, increasing both cost and embodied carbon. Every 10 MPa increase in specified strength adds approximately 40–60 kg CO₂e/m³ to the concrete's embodied carbon. Conducting detailed structural calculations rather than defaulting to conservative grade assumptions can reduce specified concrete grades by 5–15 MPa on many projects — a direct reduction in cement content and embodied carbon with no structural compromise.

📏 Optimise Structural Element Sizes

Structural concrete elements are frequently oversized due to conservative design assumptions, standard rationalisation, or construction tolerance requirements. Rigorous structural optimisation — including post-tensioning, voided flat slabs (biaxial voided slabs), ribbed slabs, and hollowcore precast units — can reduce concrete volume by 20–40% compared to solid flat plate construction for equivalent span-to-depth ratios. Each cubic metre of concrete eliminated from the design removes 240–380 kg CO₂e from the project's embodied carbon — equivalent to the impact of switching from OPC to a high-SCM mix.

🔬 Mix Design Efficiency

Modern concrete mix design optimisation uses tools such as the modified Andreasen and Andersen (mA&A) particle packing model to maximise aggregate packing density, reducing the volume of cement paste required to fill voids in the aggregate matrix. Improved packing efficiency can reduce cement content by 10–20% while maintaining target strength and workability — achieved through careful selection of aggregate grading, particle shape, and the use of fine supplementary materials to fill micro-voids. This approach is increasingly adopted in high-performance concrete specification in 2026.

♻️ Recycled Concrete Aggregate (RCA)

Recycled Crushed Aggregate (RCA) from demolished concrete structures has lower embodied carbon than virgin quarried aggregate because it avoids primary extraction and long-distance transport. Using RCA as partial coarse aggregate replacement (typically 30–50% by volume) reduces both the aggregate's embodied carbon contribution and landfill disposal costs. RCA typically has lower density, higher absorption, and slightly lower concrete strength than virgin aggregate — design specifications must account for these differences. Most building codes in 2026 permit RCA in structural concrete at up to 30% replacement with standard mix design adjustments.

Strategy 3 — Low-Carbon and Alternative Cement Types

Beyond SCM replacement within standard OPC-based mixes, a growing range of low-carbon and alternative cement technologies are commercially available in 2026 that deliver further reductions in clinker content and process emissions. These products vary in performance characteristics, availability, cost, and the strength of their supporting technical standards.

🏭 Portland Limestone Cement (PLC / CEM II)

Portland Limestone Cement (PLC), classified as CEM II/A-L or CEM II/B-L under EN 197-1 and now recognised under ASTM C595 as Type IL, incorporates interground limestone filler at 6–35% by mass replacing clinker. PLC reduces embodied carbon by 5–15% compared to CEM I OPC with minimal impact on structural performance in most applications. It is the simplest, lowest-risk transition for concrete producers in 2026 — using existing kiln and grinding infrastructure with no plant modifications. PLC is now the default cement type specified in many European and Australian sustainable construction frameworks.

🌿 LC³ — Limestone Calcined Clay Cement

Limestone Calcined Clay Cement (LC³) is a breakthrough low-carbon cement technology developed at EPFL Switzerland, combining 50% calcined low-grade kaolinite clay + 30% limestone + 20% clinker. This formulation delivers a 40% reduction in CO₂ emissions compared to OPC while matching OPC performance in workability, strength, and durability. LC³ uses widely available, non-specialist raw materials — avoiding reliance on fly ash and GGBFS supply chains — making it particularly relevant for emerging economies and regions without industrial by-product SCM availability. Commercial production is expanding rapidly in 2026 across Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

🔬 Geopolymer Concrete

Geopolymer concrete replaces Portland cement entirely with alkali-activated aluminosilicate binders — typically fly ash or GGBFS activated with sodium silicate and sodium hydroxide solutions. Embodied carbon can be 40–80% lower than equivalent OPC concrete depending on the activator type and SCM source. Geopolymer concrete exhibits excellent fire resistance, high early strength, and superior chemical resistance. Limitations in 2026 include a lack of comprehensive international standards for structural design, sensitivity to raw material variability, and the high embodied carbon of sodium silicate activators, which partially offsets the SCM carbon benefit. Commercial adoption is growing in industrial and pavement applications.

🌊 Calcium Sulfoaluminate (CSA) Cement

Calcium Sulfoaluminate (CSA) cement is produced at kiln temperatures approximately 200°C lower than Portland clinker, reducing both fuel consumption and CO₂ process emissions by 30–40% compared to OPC. CSA cement achieves very high early strength (often exceeding 40 MPa within 24 hours) and has excellent sulfate resistance. It is primarily used in rapid-repair applications, pre-cast elements requiring fast demoulding, and structures in sulfate-aggressive soils. Higher raw material cost and more complex mix design requirements limit its use to specialist applications in 2026, though interest is growing for projects with aggressive carbon targets.

Concrete Carbon Reduction — Strategy Comparison

The table below compares the main concrete carbon reduction strategies available in 2026, showing typical CO₂e savings, implementation complexity, cost impact, and technology readiness level (TRL) for each approach.

Strategy Typical CO₂e Saving Cost Impact Complexity TRL 2026 Best Application
Fly Ash Replacement (20–35%)17–29%✅ Cost savingLow⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ MatureAll structural concrete
GGBFS Replacement (40–60%)30–42%✅ Neutral–savingLow–Medium⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ MatureMarine, durability-critical
Portland Limestone Cement (PLC)5–15%✅ NeutralVery Low⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ MatureDrop-in OPC replacement
Right-size concrete grades5–15%✅ Cost savingLow⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ MatureAll projects
Structural optimisation / volume reduction10–40%✅ Cost savingMedium⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ MatureNew building design
LC³ Cement35–40%⚠️ Slight premiumMedium⭐⭐⭐⭐ CommercialRegions without SCM supply
Ternary SCM Blends (OPC+FA+SF)25–45%⚠️ Slight premiumMedium⭐⭐⭐⭐ CommercialHSC, marine, bridge decks
Geopolymer Concrete40–80%⚠️ PremiumHigh⭐⭐⭐ GrowingIndustrial, pavement
CO₂ Curing / Mineralisation5–15%⚠️ PremiumHigh⭐⭐⭐ CommercialPrecast, blocks
Carbon Capture at Cement PlantUp to 90%❌ High premiumVery High⭐⭐ Pilot / early commercialFuture baseline

Carbon Reduction Strategy Rankings

Fly Ash (20–35%)17–29% saving ✅
GGBFS (40–60%)30–42% saving ✅
Portland Limestone Cement5–15% saving ✅
Structural Optimisation10–40% saving ✅
LC³ Cement35–40% saving ⚠️
Geopolymer Concrete40–80% saving ⚠️
Carbon Capture (plant)Up to 90% ❌ cost

Strategy 4 — Carbon Capture and Utilisation in Concrete

Carbon capture and utilisation (CCU) technologies embed CO₂ directly into concrete, either during mixing or curing, permanently mineralising it as calcium carbonate within the hardened matrix. In 2026, several CCU approaches are commercially available for concrete production, offering a pathway to carbon-neutral or even carbon-negative concrete at scale.

💨 CO₂ Injection During Mixing

CO₂ gas is injected directly into the ready-mix drum during batching, where it reacts with calcium ions in the fresh concrete to form nano-calcium carbonate crystals in the paste matrix. This process permanently sequesters 3–5% of the concrete's cement mass as CO₂, reduces water demand slightly (improving workability or allowing water reduction), and can modestly increase compressive strength. Technology providers such as CarbonCure have deployed this approach commercially at hundreds of ready-mix plants globally. It requires a CO₂ supply system at the batch plant but no changes to mix design or delivery procedures.

🔬 CO₂ Curing (Accelerated Carbonation Curing)

Accelerated carbonation curing exposes freshly demoulded precast concrete elements to a concentrated CO₂ atmosphere (typically 20–99% CO₂) for 12–24 hours, driving rapid carbonation of the cement paste and permanently mineralising CO₂ as calcite. The process sequesters up to 15–25 kg CO₂ per tonne of concrete, reduces porosity, and increases early compressive strength by 10–20%, potentially allowing cement content reduction. CO₂ curing is most practical for precast manufacturing where controlled curing environments already exist — blocks, pavers, pipes, and structural precast elements.

🏭 Carbon Capture at the Cement Plant

Post-combustion carbon capture at cement kilns — using amine scrubbing, calcium looping, or oxyfuel combustion — can capture up to 90% of kiln CO₂ emissions before they reach the atmosphere. Several commercial-scale cement plant CCS (carbon capture and storage) projects are operational or under construction in 2026, including in Norway, UK, and the Netherlands. The captured CO₂ is either permanently stored in geological formations or utilised in CCU applications including concrete production. CCS adds approximately USD $80–120 per tonne of CO₂ captured to cement production cost — significant but decreasing as technology matures and carbon prices rise.

🌊 Mineralised Aggregates and Fillers

CO₂ mineralisation technology converts industrial waste streams — such as steel slag, mining tailings, and demolition waste — into stable carbonate minerals by reacting them with CO₂ in a controlled process. The resulting mineralised products can be used as supplementary fillers or fine aggregates in concrete, embedding captured CO₂ within the concrete matrix while displacing high-carbon virgin materials. In 2026, companies such as Carbfix and various startup mineralisation ventures are scaling this approach, with potential to produce carbon-negative aggregate materials at competitive cost within the next 3–5 years.

Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) and Carbon Reporting

Quantifying and verifying concrete carbon reduction requires standardised measurement and third-party verified reporting. Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) are the primary tool for communicating the embodied carbon of concrete products in 2026, governed by ISO 14044 life cycle assessment methodology and the EN 15804 product category rules for construction products.

💡 What Is an Environmental Product Declaration (EPD)?

An EPD is a third-party verified document that reports the environmental impact — including global warming potential (GWP) in kg CO₂e/m³ — of a specific concrete product, calculated using a standardised life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology. EPDs for concrete typically cover Modules A1–A3 (raw material extraction, transport, and manufacturing at the batch plant) as the minimum scope, with some EPDs extending to A4 (transport to site), A5 (placement and waste), and end-of-life modules. Project teams, specifiers, and clients can request EPDs from concrete suppliers to compare products, verify carbon reduction claims, and report embodied carbon in whole-building LCA assessments required by green building rating tools such as LEED, Green Star, and BREEAM.

✅ Concrete Carbon Reduction — Project Implementation Checklist 2026

  • Set a project carbon target: Establish a maximum kg CO₂e/m³ target for each concrete mix at project inception — typically benchmarked against the Concrete Centre or EC3 national baselines.
  • Specify SCMs in the project specification: Mandate minimum fly ash or GGBFS replacement levels in structural concrete specifications — do not leave it as a contractor option.
  • Request EPDs from concrete suppliers: Compare verified embodied carbon figures between competing concrete suppliers at tender stage — EPDs make carbon a measurable tender criterion.
  • Right-size concrete grades: Review every structural concrete grade specified — challenge any grade higher than structural calculations require.
  • Engage the structural engineer on volume reduction: Brief the structural engineer at concept stage to optimise slab thicknesses, column sizes, and foundation volumes.
  • Consider CO₂ injection at the batch plant: Specify CO₂ injection (e.g. CarbonCure-type technology) for all ready-mix concrete where the batch plant has the capability.
  • Track and report embodied carbon: Record concrete volumes, mix designs, and EPD-verified carbon factors throughout construction to compile a whole-project embodied carbon report.

⚠️ Common Concrete Carbon Reduction Mistakes to Avoid

The most common mistake in concrete carbon reduction is specifying carbon targets without providing clear technical pathways — demanding low-carbon concrete without specifying acceptable SCM types, minimum replacement rates, or EPD requirements leaves contractors without actionable guidance and often results in no meaningful carbon reduction being achieved. Other critical mistakes include specifying high-strength concrete grades (50+ MPa) where 32 MPa would structurally suffice; failing to account for slower early strength gain from high-SCM mixes in construction programme planning; accepting unverified "green concrete" claims without requesting third-party EPDs; and omitting carbon measurement from the project's KPI framework, which ensures carbon performance is never actually tracked or verified against targets.

Frequently Asked Questions — Concrete Carbon Reduction Strategies

What percentage of global CO₂ emissions does concrete produce?
Concrete and cement production are responsible for approximately 7–8% of global CO₂ emissions annually — making it one of the largest single industrial sources of greenhouse gas emissions in the world. The majority of these emissions (approximately 60%) come from the calcination of limestone during cement clinker production — a chemical process that releases CO₂ regardless of the fuel source used to heat the kiln. The remaining ~40% comes from combustion of fossil fuels for kiln heat. This combination of process and combustion emissions makes cement production challenging to decarbonise, as even switching entirely to renewable energy only addresses part of the problem — requiring SCM substitution, carbon capture, or alternative cement chemistries to achieve deep decarbonisation.
What is the best way to reduce embodied carbon in concrete?
The single most impactful and immediately available strategy for reducing embodied carbon in concrete in 2026 is replacing Portland cement with supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) — primarily fly ash, GGBFS, and silica fume. Replacing 30–50% of Portland cement with fly ash or GGBFS can reduce concrete embodied carbon by 25–40% with no increase in cost and no compromise to structural performance at 90-day strength. This is complemented by structural optimisation (using less concrete by right-sizing members and grades) which can reduce total project embodied carbon by an additional 10–40%. Together, these two strategies can achieve 40–60% carbon reduction compared to a standard OPC-only baseline mix — available on every project, today, using existing technology.
What is an Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) for concrete?
An Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) for concrete is a third-party verified document that reports the global warming potential (GWP) — measured in kg CO₂-equivalent per cubic metre or per tonne — and other environmental impact indicators of a specific concrete product, calculated using a standardised life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology. EPDs for concrete are governed by ISO 14044 and the EN 15804 product category rules. They allow project teams to compare the embodied carbon of competing concrete products on a like-for-like basis, verify carbon reduction claims made by suppliers, and report verified embodied carbon data in green building rating submissions (LEED, Green Star, BREEAM). Requesting EPDs from concrete suppliers at tender stage is the most direct way to make embodied carbon a measurable procurement criterion.
Does using fly ash or GGBFS weaken concrete?
At replacement rates commonly used in structural concrete (20–35% fly ash or 30–50% GGBFS), these SCMs do not weaken concrete — they typically produce equivalent or superior long-term strength compared to OPC-only mixes. The key difference is the time profile of strength development: SCM concrete gains strength more slowly than OPC concrete in the first 28 days, but at 56 days, 90 days, and beyond, SCM concrete often matches or exceeds the strength of the OPC control. This slower early strength gain must be accounted for in construction programme planning — form removal, post-tensioning, and loading schedules may need to be adjusted. At very high replacement rates (70%+ GGBFS or 45%+ fly ash), 28-day strength may fall short of specification requirements — structural engineers must verify adequacy for each application.
What is geopolymer concrete and how much carbon does it save?
Geopolymer concrete is a cement-free concrete that replaces Portland cement entirely with alkali-activated aluminosilicate binders — typically fly ash or GGBFS activated with sodium hydroxide and sodium silicate solutions. Because it contains no Portland cement clinker (the primary source of concrete's embodied carbon), geopolymer concrete can achieve embodied carbon reductions of 40–80% compared to equivalent OPC concrete, depending on the activator chemistry used. High-sodium silicate activator content reduces the carbon saving significantly — low-activator formulations achieve the largest reductions. Current limitations include lack of comprehensive structural design standards in most countries, sensitivity to raw material variability, and the high embodied carbon of sodium silicate. Commercial adoption is growing in 2026 for industrial floors, pavements, and non-standard structural applications where specification flexibility permits.
How does CO₂ injection into concrete work?
CO₂ injection technology (commercially available from companies including CarbonCure) introduces a precise dose of industrial CO₂ gas into the ready-mix drum during batching. The CO₂ reacts with calcium ions in the fresh concrete to form nano-scale calcium carbonate crystals permanently embedded in the cement paste matrix — a process called accelerated mineralisation. This permanently sequesters approximately 3–5 kg of CO₂ per cubic metre of concrete produced (roughly 1–2% of the concrete's total embodied carbon), reduces water demand slightly, and can modestly improve compressive strength, sometimes allowing a small reduction in cement content. The technology requires a CO₂ supply and injection system at the batch plant but does not change mix design or concrete delivery procedures. It is most effective as one component of a broader carbon reduction strategy alongside SCM use and structural optimisation.
Can concrete reabsorb CO₂ over its service life?
Yes — hardened concrete naturally reabsorbs CO₂ from the atmosphere through a process called carbonation, in which atmospheric CO₂ reacts with calcium hydroxide in the cement paste to form calcium carbonate. Over a typical 50–100 year service life, concrete structures can reabsorb 10–25% of the CO₂ emitted during their production — a process that accelerates after demolition when crushed concrete aggregate has a larger surface area exposed to the atmosphere. This natural CO₂ reabsorption (sometimes called the "concrete carbon cycle") is recognised in whole-life carbon accounting frameworks including EN 16757 and some national LCA methodologies. However, it does not offset the need to reduce production-stage emissions — natural carbonation rates are slow and highly variable with member geometry, exposure, and concrete mix composition.

Concrete Carbon Reduction Resources

🌍 World Green Building Council — Embodied Carbon

The World Green Building Council's Bringing Embodied Carbon Upfront report and The Principles framework set out the global industry commitment to halving embodied carbon in new buildings and infrastructure by 2030 and achieving net-zero embodied carbon by 2050. These frameworks define the measurement, target-setting, and reporting standards that are shaping procurement requirements and specification practice for low-carbon concrete globally in 2026.

WorldGBC →

⚗️ Concrete Additives & Admixtures Guide

Supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) — fly ash, GGBFS, silica fume, and metakaolin — are both the most effective concrete carbon reduction tools and the most technically complex to specify correctly. Understanding their dosage rates, strength development profiles, compatibility requirements, and interaction with chemical admixtures is essential background knowledge for anyone implementing a concrete carbon reduction strategy on a real project.

Admixtures Guide →

🔍 Assessing Existing Concrete Structures

Assessing and extending the service life of existing concrete structures is itself a powerful carbon reduction strategy — reusing an existing concrete structure avoids 100% of the embodied carbon of a replacement structure. Understanding how to assess structural condition, residual service life, and options for strengthening and refurbishment is a critical skill set for engineers working within a whole-life carbon framework in 2026.

Concrete Assessment Guide →