UK’s first carbon capture facility for cement gets a step closer
A contract has been signed for the Front End Engineering Design (FEED) of the UK’s first carbon capture plant to abate emissions from cement production.

Set to be deployed at Heidelberg Materials’ Padeswood Cement Works in North Wales, the plant will be designed by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) in partnership with engineering services company, Worley. According to the partners, the facility could be operational by 2028, capturing large volumes of flue gas produced during the cement manufacturing process and storing it in a depleted gas field off Liverpool Bay.
"The cement industry is ‘hard to abate’, because CO2 emissions cannot be avoided in the production process,” said Kenji Terasawa, CEO and head of Engineering Solutions at MHI.
“Heidelberg Materials UK has committed to reaching net zero carbon by 2050 and will be deploying our proprietary carbon capture technology, the Advanced KM CDR Process, to tackle this challenge - leading the way in the UK's cement industry. We are proud to contribute to the effort on this commitment through the Padeswood CCS project.”
MHI and Worley have worked together on several carbon capture projects and previously completed a pre-FEED project for Padeswood. The FEED stage should support Heidelberg Materials attain UK government approval, secure a final investment decision and enable the EPC (Engineering, Procurement, Construction) stage to commence in the first quarter of 2025.
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