Complete guide to low-carbon, recycled, and green concrete mixes available in Australia
Discover all sustainable concrete options available in Australia in 2026. Covers fly ash, ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBFS), geopolymer concrete, recycled aggregate, ultra-low carbon cement, green star ratings, EPD requirements, and how to specify sustainable concrete for residential, commercial, and infrastructure projects.
Practical, compliant, and commercially available green concrete solutions for Australian construction projects in 2026
Concrete production accounts for approximately 8% of global CO₂ emissions, with Portland cement clinker production being the primary source. In Australia, the construction industry faces increasing pressure from Green Star requirements, government procurement policies, and client sustainability targets to reduce the embodied carbon of concrete structures. Switching from ordinary Portland cement (OPC) concrete to sustainable alternatives can reduce embodied carbon by 20–80% per cubic metre without sacrificing structural performance.
All major sustainable concrete options — including fly ash blended cement, GGBFS concrete, geopolymer concrete, and recycled aggregate mixes — are commercially available from ready-mix suppliers in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, and most regional centres in 2026. Australian suppliers including Holcim, Boral, Hanson, and Brickworks offer certified low-carbon concrete products with Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) to support Green Star and Infrastructure Sustainability (IS) rating tool submissions.
All sustainable concrete options used in Australian construction must comply with AS 3600 (Concrete Structures) and AS 1379 (Specification and Supply of Concrete). Supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) such as fly ash and slag are governed by AS 3582. Recycled aggregate concrete must meet AS 2758.1. Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) must comply with ISO 14044 and the Australian EPD programme to be accepted for Green Star and IS Tool credits in 2026.
Sustainable concrete options in Australia are concrete mixes and systems that reduce environmental impact — primarily embodied carbon (CO₂e), water consumption, and waste — compared to standard ordinary Portland cement (OPC) concrete. They achieve this by replacing a portion or all of the Portland cement clinker with supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs), using recycled or reclaimed aggregates, optimising mix design to use less total binder, or using entirely alternative binder systems such as geopolymer chemistry.
The choice of sustainable concrete option in Australia depends on the structural requirements of the element, the required exposure classification under AS 3600, the project's sustainability rating target (Green Star, IS Tool, or NABERS), concrete supply availability in the project location, and the project programme — some sustainable mixes have slower early strength gain that affects formwork striking times. Reviewing the condition of existing concrete on site before specifying a sustainable replacement mix is covered in our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide.
Indicative CO₂e reductions relative to standard OPC concrete at equivalent structural grade. Actual reductions depend on mix design, SCM source, and transport distances across Australia.
Fly ash concrete is the most widely used sustainable concrete option in Australia. Fly ash is a by-product of coal-fired power station combustion and is classified as a Class F (low calcium) or Class C (high calcium) pozzolan under AS 3582.1. When used as a partial replacement for Portland cement (typically 20–40% by mass of total binder), fly ash reduces the total clinker content — and therefore the embodied CO₂ — of the concrete mix while improving workability, reducing heat of hydration, and enhancing long-term durability through pozzolanic reaction.
In Australia, fly ash is sourced primarily from coal power stations in Queensland (Tarong, Callide, Gladstone), New South Wales (Eraring, Bayswater, Mt Piper), and Victoria (Loy Yang). As coal plant closures accelerate under Australia's energy transition policies, fly ash supply is expected to tighten beyond 2026, making GGBFS and geopolymer concrete increasingly important sustainable alternatives. For projects using fly ash concrete adjacent to foundations or retaining structures, our Backfilling Around Concrete Foundations Guide covers complementary earthwork considerations.
Ground Granulated Blast-Furnace Slag (GGBFS) concrete is a highly effective sustainable concrete option used extensively in Australian infrastructure projects. GGBFS is a latent hydraulic binder produced as a by-product of iron blast-furnace operations. In Australia, GGBFS is produced at BlueScope Steel's Port Kembla steelworks (NSW) and at OneSteel Whyalla (SA). It is classified under AS 3582.2 and can replace 40–70% of Portland cement in concrete mixes.
GGBFS is a latent hydraulic material — unlike fly ash (which is pozzolanic), GGBFS reacts directly with water in the presence of an alkali activator (typically Portland cement). At 50% replacement, GGBFS concrete achieves lower permeability than OPC concrete at equivalent strength, making it the preferred sustainable option for below-ground structures, tunnels, marine piles, and water-retaining structures in Australian exposure classifications B2, C, and U under AS 3600.
GGBFS has an embodied carbon intensity of approximately 50–80 kg CO₂e per tonne — compared to approximately 820–900 kg CO₂e per tonne for Portland cement clinker. At a 50% GGBFS replacement rate in a 400 kg/m³ binder content mix, the embodied carbon of the cementitious fraction is reduced by approximately 45–50%. Full-replacement GGBFS mixes (with a small Portland cement activator) can achieve reductions exceeding 55%.
GGBFS concrete is the dominant sustainable concrete option for Australian port, harbour, and coastal infrastructure in 2026. Projects including wharves, seawalls, jetty piles, desalination plant structures, and coastal bridges routinely specify 50–70% GGBFS replacement for its superior chloride resistance. The reduced heat of hydration also makes GGBFS concrete the standard choice for mass concrete elements such as bridge pier caps, mat foundations, and dam structures across Australia.
GGBFS concrete has slower early strength gain than OPC concrete, which affects construction programme at high replacement rates. At 50% GGBFS, 3-day compressive strength is typically 50–65% of the 28-day value vs 70–80% for OPC concrete. However, GGBFS concrete continues to gain strength beyond 28 days — at 90 days, strength is often 110–125% of the 28-day result. Programme-critical elements should use lower GGBFS replacement rates (30–40%) or specify a minimum 3-day or 7-day strength in the concrete order.
Geopolymer concrete is the most carbon-efficient sustainable concrete option commercially available in Australia in 2026. It uses no Portland cement — the binder is formed by alkali-activating aluminosilicate precursor materials (typically fly ash, GGBFS, or metakaolin) with sodium silicate and sodium hydroxide solutions. The resulting binder has comparable or superior mechanical and durability properties to OPC concrete at the same strength grade, while reducing embodied carbon by 40–80% depending on the precursor materials and supply chain.
Recycled aggregate concrete (RAC) uses crushed concrete rubble or reclaimed construction and demolition (C&D) waste as a partial or full replacement for virgin coarse aggregate. In Australia, recycled crushed concrete aggregate (RCA) is classified under AS 2758.1 and is permitted at up to 30% replacement of coarse aggregate in structural concrete, and up to 100% in non-structural applications such as pathways, drainage layers, and mass fill concrete.
All major Australian ready-mix concrete suppliers offer branded sustainable concrete product ranges in 2026, each with independently verified Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) that quantify the embodied carbon reduction compared to a declared reference OPC concrete mix. These products are formulated using SCM blends, optimised mix designs, and in some cases novel low-carbon cement clinker technologies.
| Product / Supplier | Binder Technology | CO₂ Reduction vs OPC | Strength Grades Available | EPD Available | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Holcim ECOPact | High SCM blend (fly ash + GGBFS) | 30–60% | N20 – N65 | Yes — ISO 14044 | All structural applications |
| Boral TEC Concrete | Fly ash + GGBFS optimised blend | 25–55% | N25 – N50 | Yes — Australian EPD | Slabs, footings, columns |
| Hanson EnviroCore | GGBFS dominant blend | 30–50% | N20 – N65 | Yes — Australian EPD | Infrastructure, marine |
| Wagners EFC | Geopolymer (fly ash + GGBFS) | 40–80% | N25 – N50 | Yes — project-specific | Pavements, industrial floors |
| Zeobond E-Crete | Geopolymer (fly ash activated) | 40–70% | N25 – N40 | Yes — ISO 14044 | Road infrastructure, VIC |
| Cement Australia Enviro | Blended Portland cement (fly ash) | 20–35% | N20 – N50 | Yes — Australian EPD | Residential and commercial |
| CCAA Green Concrete | Multiple SCM options (specifier choice) | 20–60% | N20 – N65+ | Supplier-dependent | All applications via CCAA spec |
Australia's two primary green building rating systems — Green Star (administered by the Green Building Council of Australia) and the Infrastructure Sustainability (IS) Tool (administered by the Infrastructure Sustainability Council) — both provide credits for specifying sustainable concrete options on projects. In 2026, Green Star Buildings v1.3 and IS Tool v2.0 are the current versions applicable to most new projects, and both require Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) as the evidence basis for embodied carbon claims.
Specifying sustainable concrete options in Australia requires a performance-based approach rather than a prescriptive recipe approach. Instead of specifying "N32 concrete with 380 kg/m³ OPC", a sustainable specification states the required compressive strength, exposure classification, maximum w/c ratio, minimum cover, maximum shrinkage, and maximum embodied carbon (kg CO₂e/m³) — then allows the supplier to optimise the mix using available SCMs. This approach is aligned with the Concrete Institute of Australia's Z7 Sustainable Concrete Practice guidelines current in 2026.
A performance-based concrete specification for sustainable outcomes should include: characteristic compressive strength (f'c), exposure classification (A1–U per AS 3600), maximum water-to-binder ratio, minimum cover to reinforcement, maximum drying shrinkage (typically ≤ 750 microstrain at 56 days), maximum embodied carbon target in kg CO₂e/m³, requirement for a third-party verified EPD, and any specific requirements for early strength gain that may limit SCM replacement rates.
Engage your preferred ready-mix concrete supplier a minimum of 4–6 weeks before the first concrete pour for a sustainable concrete project. Sustainable mix designs using high SCM replacement rates, geopolymer binders, or recycled aggregates require pre-qualification testing to demonstrate compliance with all specified performance criteria. Request the supplier's current EPD documentation and confirm that the proposed sustainable concrete mix is batch-plant approved and available at the supply plant closest to your project.
As a guide for Australian projects in 2026, indicative embodied carbon targets for common structural concrete elements using sustainable mixes are: residential slabs N25 — target ≤ 200 kg CO₂e/m³; commercial columns N40 — target ≤ 260 kg CO₂e/m³; infrastructure pavements N32 — target ≤ 220 kg CO₂e/m³; marine structures N50 — target ≤ 280 kg CO₂e/m³. These targets are achievable with GGBFS or fly ash blend mixes and represent approximately 35–45% reduction from standard OPC concrete.
Sustainable concrete mixes must be verified through the same QA testing programme as conventional concrete under AS 1379 — compressive strength cylinders, slump or slump flow, temperature, and air content as required. For mixes with high SCM content (above 40% replacement), consider extending the standard test age from 28 days to 56 days to capture the full strength development of the mix. This must be agreed with the structural engineer and documented in the concrete management plan prior to the first pour.
Sustainable concrete mixes with high SCM content are more sensitive to curing conditions than OPC concrete. GGBFS and fly ash blended concretes require a minimum of 7 days moist curing (vs 3 days for OPC concrete) to develop adequate surface durability and resist plastic shrinkage cracking. In hot and dry Australian conditions — particularly in Queensland, Western Australia, and South Australia during summer — extended curing and wind breaks are essential for sustainable concrete pours to achieve their design durability performance.
The cost of sustainable concrete options in Australia in 2026 varies by product and region. Fly ash blended concrete is typically cost-neutral or slightly cheaper than equivalent OPC concrete. GGBFS blended concrete carries a modest premium of $5–$15/m³ in most markets. Geopolymer concrete is typically priced at a premium of $20–$60/m³ over standard OPC grades due to the cost of activator chemicals and specialist batching. However, when Green Star credits, reduced carbon tax liability, and client sustainability requirements are factored in, the lifecycle cost case for sustainable concrete is increasingly strong in 2026.
The National Construction Code (NCC) 2026 does not yet mandate the use of sustainable concrete options, but it does require compliance with referenced Australian Standards (AS 3600, AS 1379) which themselves permit and in some cases encourage the use of SCM-blended concretes. The NCC's Whole-of-Life performance provisions are expected to increasingly reference embodied carbon limits in the 2028 edition. Several state governments — including the ACT, Victoria, and Queensland — have introduced government procurement policies requiring sustainable concrete with EPDs on all publicly funded projects above $10 million in value from 2026 onwards.
| Sustainable Concrete Type | AS Standard | Max SCM Replacement | Structural Use Permitted | Green Star Credit Eligible | Supply Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fly Ash Blended (Class F) | AS 3582.1 | 40% of binder | Yes — all exposure classes | Yes — with EPD | Standard — no lead time |
| GGBFS Blended | AS 3582.2 | 70% of binder | Yes — all exposure classes | Yes — with EPD | Standard — no lead time |
| Silica Fume Blended | AS 3582.3 | 10% of binder | Yes — all exposure classes | Yes — with EPD | Standard — no lead time |
| Geopolymer Concrete | No dedicated AS yet (2026) | 100% (no OPC) | Yes — with engineer approval | Yes — with EPD | 4–8 weeks specialist |
| Recycled Aggregate (RCA) | AS 2758.1 | 30% coarse aggregate | Yes — non-aggressive exposure | Yes — with certification | Standard — check availability |
| ULC Branded Products | AS 1379 + EPD | Supplier-specific | Yes — full range | Yes — EPD provided | Standard — no lead time |
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The Concrete Institute of Australia (CIA) publishes the Z7 Sustainable Concrete Practice recommended practice document and maintains guidance on specifying SCM-blended concrete, geopolymer concrete, and low-carbon concrete in accordance with Australian Standards. The CIA also administers the Australian Concrete Industry Sustainability Framework which tracks industry-wide embodied carbon reduction progress against 2030 targets.
CIA Website →Air entrainment is commonly combined with sustainable SCM blended mixes to further improve durability and reduce water demand in concrete. Our air-entrained concrete guide covers how air entrainment works, the correct dosage ranges for different applications, and how it interacts with fly ash and GGBFS in sustainable concrete mix designs for Australian conditions in 2026.
Air Entrainment Guide →Before demolishing existing concrete structures and specifying sustainable replacement concrete, a condition assessment identifies reusable elements, quantifies recycled aggregate potential, and informs the embodied carbon calculation for the whole project. Our concrete structure assessment guide covers all non-destructive and destructive testing methods applicable to existing concrete in Australia under current practice in 2026.
Assessment Guide →