Carbon

Our vision:

To be recognised as a leading force in the delivery of a low carbon environment

Strategy:

Maximise energy and carbon efficiencies; deliver products with lower embodied carbon; support national and European carbon reduction targets

Action plan:

Achieve ISO 50001 certification and improve energy efficiency of production plants, increase the use of renewable energy specifically solar energy, and waste as fuel; reduce CO2 emissions from transport by extending our in-house fleet to gain greater control and optimise distribution.

2020 target:

Reduce carbon emissions by 10 per cent and energy emissions by five per cent per tonne of product based on 2010 baseline

Energy efficiency

Energy use per tonne rises

Overall energy use rose during the year, reflecting higher production levels, and energy use per tonne was also up. This was principally due to increased production of clay bricks, which is highly energy intensive, increased use of recycled asphalt planings (RAP) in our asphalt plants and a move in our concrete business to supply materials which are mixed at the plant rather than in the truck. This provides improved quality.

We continue to invest in new technology and to embed energy awareness by our support of Climate Week, quarterly conference calls on energy reduction and promotion of the message ‘switch it off’. In the second half of the year we decided to seek the ISO 50001 energy management standard as a means of complying with forthcoming ESOS legislation and to help drive energy improvements into the business. Work is under way on this programme.

Energy consumption

Carbon energy consumption.
Energy consumption data
Energy consumption
2010 (baseline)
2012
2013
2014
Energy consumption – kilowatt hours per tonne
88,3693.8491.4594.14
Energy consumption – total megawatt hours
3,625,0453,456,7773,769,7174,070,549
 

Note: Historical data (kWh/tonne) adjusted to reflect updated production figures

Target: 5 per cent reduction based on 2010

Click here for data by business line


Waste as fuel

Waste fuel use increases

We continue to invest in new facilities at our three cement works to enable greater use of alternative fuels. These include profuel – a solid kiln fuel manufactured from paper, plastic and fibrous wastes that are either uneconomic or impossible to recycle – and solid recovered fuel (SRF), which is made from domestic waste and biomass. Overall use of waste as a fuel in our cement kilns continues to rise and the use of biomass also increased to 16%.

Cement fuel derived from waste - tonnes data
Cement fuel derived from waste
2010 (baseline)
2012
2013
2014
All waste

158,704 (53%)

140,096 (54%)

181,738 (58%)

207,121 (61%)

Biomass

72,727 (23%)

57,081 (16%)

57,128 (13%)

75,837 (16%)

 
Target: 35 per cent use of biofuel by 2020

CO2 emissions from production

Carbon conversion factor affects results

There was an 11 per cent rise in kilogrammes of CO2 per tonne of production due to a different mix of energy generation and a change in the carbon conversion factor applied to energy use, principally electricity. Our renewable energy programme is continuing and we are looking particularly at sites with potential for solar generators.

CO2 emissions from production

Carbon CO2 emissions from production.
CO2 emissions from production data
CO2 emissions from production
2010 (baseline)
2012
2013
2014
Kilogrammes of CO2 per tonne of product

50.73

53.62

52.87

56.68

Tonnes of CO2 from production

2,081,310

1,975,206

2,179,521

2,450,699

 

Note: Historical data (kg CO2/tonne) adjusted to reflect updated production figures.

Target: 10 per cent reduction in carbon emissions by 2020 based on 2010 baseline

Click here for data by business line


CO2 emissions from transport

Improvements in vehicle scheduling 

CO2 emissions from transport on a per tonne basis fell slightly during the year partly as a result of similar reduction in distance carried per tonne. This is an impact of opening sites again after closures in previous years. The average CO2 emissions for the 161 fleet cars we purchased for employee use in 2014 was 124g/km compared to a fleet market average of 137g/km and a total market average of 140g/km.

A project to centralise, standardise and optimise order handling and vehicle scheduling in the aggregates, asphalt and concrete business lines is ongoing. The aim is to improve vehicle use and reduce fuel costs. The project is focused on the effective and efficient use of our delivery fleet through the introduction of vehicle optimisation software and a material resource planner (MRP) to schedule internal deliveries. All aspects of distribution are now managed by the logistics team reporting to a UK supply chain director.

Transport efficiency

Carbon transport efficiency.
Transport efficiency data
Transport efficiency
2010 (baseline)
2012
2013
2014
Tonnes delivered

31,503,169

26,570,201

28,626,905

29,952,430

kg CO2 / tonne

4.42

4.36

4.37

4.31

Total distance travelled km

129,408,218

107,504,846

117,251,403

121,162,796

Tonnes CO2 / year

139,380

115,956

125,236

129,171

 

Note: 2013 data amended to correct an error in previous data

Target: Reduce COemissions by five per cent per tonne by 2020 based on 2010

Mode of transport %

Carbon transport mode.
Mode of transport data
Mode of transport
2010 (baseline)
2012
2013
2014
Road

91.36

89.50

89.55

88.9
Rail

7.42

9.19

9.23

10.7
Water

1.23

1.31

1.23

0.5

 

Click here for data by business line

Industry 1st - ISO 50001 certification across all lines of business.
CO2 emissions cut by 2.1% per tonne of product.
Energy consumption down by 2%.
 
Carbon.

Mill fan upgrade cuts energy use

Mill fan upgrade at Purfleet.

A fan upgrade at the Purfleet Regen works in Essex has resulted in a 50 per cent reduction in energy on one of the grinding mills, reducing CO2 emissions by 1,487 tonnes per year. Read more

Ketton solar plant wins industry award 

Ketton solar farm.

The eight megawatt solar energy site at Ketton cement works in Rutland has won a top industry award. Read more

Five-star rating for cement fleet 

Five-star rating for cement fleet.

Hanson Cement has joined the ECO Stars fleet recognition scheme and been given a five-star rating. Read more