Title: CONCRETE AND ENVIRONMENT
1CONCRETEAND ENVIRONMENT
Seminar in Mexico (08 April)
- Koji SAKAI
- Kagawa University, Japan
2Crisis of Earth
- The earth is in a serious crisis in a mere
200 some years after the Industrial Revolution in
UK - (1) resource/energy
- depletion
- (2) global warming
3Historical Background of Environmental Issues
- The National Trust (1895)
- The Limits to Growth (1971)
- UN Conference on Human Environment (1972)
- Brundtland Report (1987)
- UN Conference on Environment and Development
(1992) - COP3 in Kyoto (1997)
- Effectuation of Kyoto Protocol (2005)
4IPCC Fourth Assessment WG1 Report (Feb. 2007)
- Global warming and its causes
- Warming of the climate system is unequivocal.
- Most of the observed increase in globally
averaged temperatures since mid-20th century is
very likely due to the observed increase in
anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations. -
likelihood over 90 -
caused by human activity
5IPCC Fourth Assessment WG2 Report (April. 2007)
- Observational evidence from all continents and
most oceans shows that many natural systems are
being affected by regional climate changes,
particularly temperature increases. - Sustainable development can reduce vulnerability
to climate change.
6History of Concrete Technology
- Less than 200 years since the invention of
modern cement - Effect of AE agent was not confirmed until 1938.
- Use of concrete in large quantities has only
been seen in the last 50 years. - History of concrete technology is not long.
7Environmental Issues in Construction and Concrete
Industry
- Resources and energy are consumed in large
quantities. - Concrete is the second most widely consumed
substances on earth, after water. - Vast amounts of waste are discharged.
8Environmental Aspects in Concrete and Related
Technologies
- Aggregate
- Cement
- Admixture
9Aggregate
- Aggregate used in a construction material
accounts for some 20 billion tons. - The replacement of natural aggregate with crushed
stone aggregate increases. - The amount of concrete mass due to the
demolishment of concrete structures increases.
10Recycling of Concrete Masses
- Technologies for recycled aggregate production in
Japan - (1) Heating and rubbing method
- (2) Eccentric-shaft rotor method
- (3) Mechanical grinding method
11Heating and rubbing method
Heating 300?
Fine powder can be used as a substitute
solidification material.
12Eccentric-Shaft Rotor Method
Crushed concrete lumps are passed downward
between an outer and inner cylinder.
13Mechanical Grinding Method
Recycled aggregate discharge
Charge inlet
External diameter 1500mm
Steel ball
Passing hole
Drum 4000mm
Partition Plate
Coarse and fine aggregates are produced by
separating a drum into small sections with
partitions.
14JIS A 5021 Requirements for High-Quality Recycled
Aggregates H
nlt not less than, nmt not more than
15Limits of Amount of Deleterious Substances for
Recycled Aggregate H
16On-site Concrete Resource Recycling System(HRM)
P1Road sub-bases production, P2 Recycled
aggregate recovering, P3 Concrete mixing and
delivery, P4 Ground improvement
CO2 Emission(t)
17Alternative Aggregates
- Blast-furnace slag
- Fly ash
- Molten slag
18JIS A 5031 Requirements for Molten Slag Aggregates
nlt not less than, nmt not more than
19Estimated World Cement Production (by Jahren)
20Estimated Cement Demand (by Humphreys et al.)
21Unit-based CO2 Emission in Cement Manufactures
22Amount of Wastes Utilization for Cement
Production in Japan
23Utilization of Waste and By-products in Cement
Production
The target value of waste and by-product
utilization in Japan is 400kg/t-cement.
24International Comparison of Energy Consumption in
Cement-Clinker Production
25International Comparison of Energy Consumption in
Cement-Clinker Production
26CO2 Emission from Construction of Concrete
Structures
- In 2050, worlds cement production will emit 3.5
to 5.2 billion tons of CO2 . - It is assumed that worlds cement production
emits 1.3 to 1.7 billion tons of CO2 and
aggregates are ignored. - If the total CO2 is multiplied by 1.4, it
corresponds to 22 to 32 of the worlds CO2
emission in 2003.
27Utilization of Admixtures
- Effective use of industrial byproducts
- Improvement of concrete properties
- Reduction of environmental impacts
28Utilization of Blast-Furnace Slag and Fly Ash in
Japan
Other 12.1
9.8 million tons
25.7 million tons
Fly Ash
Blast-Furnace Slag
29Estimated World Admixture Minerals Production (by
Jahren)
30ISO/TC 71 Resolution 16 Salvador-Bahia, Brazil, 1
June 2007
- ISO/TC 71 agrees to create a new sub-committee
(SC8) on Environmental Management for Concrete
and Concrete structures. - This SC should create formal liaison with other
ISO/TCs working in this field, e.g. ISO/TC
207(Environmental Management) and ISO/TC
59(Building Construction.
31Outcome of ISO TMB Voting
- Due to the request from some TMB member
bodies, TMB determined to defer this item till
the next meeting of TMB, February 13-14 2008.
32TC71s Response to Concerns Raised from Some
Countries
- Concrete sector can not apply ISO 21930 without
having the specific rules for concrete materials
and structural concrete. - The standards by ISO/TC71/SC8 would not conflict
with ISO 21930 and other ISO environmental
standards, but rather would promote their
application in the concrete industry.
33ISO TMB Resolution 6/2008
- TMB, noting the proposal to establish a
Subcommittee of ISO/TC71 to deal with
Environmental management for concrete and
concrete structures, ratifies the creation of the
subcommittee and asks that the appropriate
liaisons be established with ISO/TC207 and
ISO/TC59/SC17
34IPCC FOURTH ASSESSMENT REPORT (Synthesis Report)
- Warming of the climate system is
unequivocal, as is now evident from observations
of increases in global average air and ocean
temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice,
and rising global average sea level.
35IPCC REPORTAdaptation by Infrastructure/Settlemen
t Sector
- Relocation
- Seawalls
- Storm surge barriers
- Others
- Standards and regulations that integrate
climate change consideration are necessary.
36IPCC REPORTAdaptability by Transport Sector
- Realignment/relocation
- Others
- Design standards and planning for roads,
rail, and other infrastructure to cope with
warming and drainage are necessary.
37IPCC REPORTMitigation Technologies by Transport
Sector
- More fuel efficient vehicles, etc
- Modal shifts from road transport to rail and
public transport systems - Others
- It is necessary to influence mobility needs
through land use regulation and infrastructure
planning.
38IPCC REPORTMitigation Technologies by Building
Sector
- Efficient lighting, heating and cooling devices,
etc - Integrated design of commercial buildings
- Others
- Building codes and certification may be
attractive for new buildings.
39IPCC REPORTMitigation Technologies by Industry
Sector
- More efficient end-use electrical equipment
- Material recycling and substitution
- Advanced energy efficiency cement and iron
manufacture - Others
- Success factors include clear targets, third
party involvement in design, etc.
40IPCC REPORTMitigation Technologies by Waste
Sector
- Landfill CH4 recovery
- Waste incineration with energy recovery
- Recycling and waste minimization
- Others
-
41What Can Concrete/Construction Sector Do for
Realization of IPCC Proposals ?
42Our Future Direction
- To know our circumstances and develop low
environmental impact technologies - To standardize common rules for the evaluation of
environmental impact and systems by which the
reduction of environmental impact is driven.
43Consumption of Natural Resources on Earth
(billion tons)
L. R. Brown ECO-ECONOMY
44Global CO2 Emission
45CO2 emission from cement industry in 2000
(Humphreys et al. 2002)
46CO2 Emission from World Concrete/Construction
Industry
- Cement 2 billion tons0.87 1.74
- Steel 1.3 billion tons1.320.35 0.60
- Aggregate 20 billion tons 0.0033 0.007
- Sub-total 2.35 billion tons
- Total Including CO2 from execution and
transport, 2.351.4 3.29 billion tons
More than 10 of total CO2 emission from all
industries
47- CONCRETE, PRODUCED AT AN ESTIMATED RATE OF
FIVE BILLION CUBIC YARDS PER YEAR, IS THE SECOND
MOST WIDELY CONSUMED SUBSTANCES ON EARTH, AFTER
WATER !!! - LIQUID STONENEW ARCHITECTURE IN CONCRETE
(National Building Museum)
48Cement Sustainability Initiative (CSI)(World
Business Council for SD)
- Our industry uses a great deal of fossil
energy and materials quarried from the earth the
conversion processes in our kilns release
significant amounts of CO2. - While we can find ways to consume less
energy,use less natural resources, and release
less pollution, we expect to supply more cement
for the growing population.
49Key Performance Indicators of CSI
- Climate change management
- Fuels and materials use
- Health and safety
- Emission monitoring and reporting
- Local impacts
50CSI
- Developed CO2 Accounting and Reporting Standard
for the Cement Industry (Cement CO2 Protocol) in
2005 - This protocol may be used as a tool to
prepare the inventory data of cement in ISO
standard. - Working to develop a document on concrete
recycling (CSI TF7)
51Purpose of ISO Standardization for Sustainable
Concrete/Construction
- Use and development of low environmental impact
construction materials - High energy efficiency in construction
- Appropriate management of construction and wastes
- Introduction of a system to stimulate the
potential for continuous environmental
improvement
52Existing ISO Standards on Environment (1)
- ISO 14020 Environmental labels and declarations
General principles - ISO 14021 Environmental labels and declarations
Self-declared environmental claims (Type?) - ISO 14024 Environmental labels and declarations
Type I environmental labeling Principles and
procedures (Eco-labeling bodythird party) - ISO 14025 Environmental labels and declarations
Type? environmental declarations Principles
and procedures (based on LCA data )
53Existing ISO Standards on Environment (2)
- ISO 14040 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Principles and framework - ISO 14041 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Goal and scope definition and
inventory analysis - ISO 14042 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Life cycle impact assessment - ISO 14043 Environmental management Life cycle
assessment Life cycle interpretation
54Framework of ISO 14040 Family
55ISO 14042 Life Cycle Impact Assessment
- Classification/characterization/weighing
- Impact category (class representing environmental
issues of concern to which LCI results may be
assigned ex. GWP) - Category indicator (quantifiable representation
of an impact category ex. CO2 in GWP) - Category endpoint (attribute or aspects of
natural environment, human health or resources,
identifying an environmental issue of concern)
56Object of ISO 14000 Family Developed by ISO/TC207
- Industrial products
- Services
57ISO 15686-6 Building and Constructed Assets
Service Life Planning Part 6 Procedures for
Considering Environmental Impacts
- ISO 15686-6, developed by ISO/TC59/SC14, defines
how and when to include environmental aspects
into the design of a constructed asset.
58Framework of Technical, Economic and
Environmental Assessment in SLP
59ISO 21930Sustainability in Building Construction
- Environmental declarations of building products
- ISO 21930, developed by ISO/TC59/SC17,
provides the principles and requirements for Type
III environmental product declarations (EPD) of
building products.
60ISO 21930
- Product category group of building products that
can fulfill equivalent functions. - Building product goods or service used during
the life cycle of a building or other
construction works - EPD Environmental declaration providing
quantified environmental data using predetermined
parameters or additional environmental
information - It is possible to have an EPD for a material, a
building product, a component, an assembly and/or
a building element.
61ISO 21930
- Information on concrete in ISO 21930
- Only some words, such as cement, gravel,
concrete, concrete wall or ceiling, appear once
in an appendix. - It is quite difficult to do things using the
existing ISO environmental standards. - We can use them only as a framework.
62Tools for Environmental Impact Evaluation
- BEES, ENVEST, EcoQuantum
- GEMIS, SimaPro
- SBTool, BREEAM, LEED, CASBEE
- (Characteristic of these tools)
- There are many evaluation indexes, which include
other indexes than CO2 etc. - There is no integrated evaluation system for
concrete and concrete structures.
63We need the common rules for the environmental
impact evaluation and reduction systems of
concrete and concrete structures.
64DevelopmentofISO XXXXX Environmental
Management for Concrete and Concrete Structures
Part 1 ? (TC71/SC8)
65Framework for Development of ISO XXXXX by TC71/SC8
- The consistence with the existing ISO
environmental standards, such as ISO 14000
family, ISO 15686-6, and ISO 21930, should be
kept. - In other words, ISO XXXXX will be made from the
point of view on how the existing ISO
environmental standards are specialized to
concrete and concrete structures
66Framework for Development of ISO XXXXX by TC71/SC8
- ISO XXXXX will specify a procedure to consider
environmental aspects in design, production and
recycling of concrete, execution, reuse and
demolition, etc. - In ISO XXXXX, the implementing methods for LCA of
concrete and concrete structures will be
provided, covering materials, execution,
maintenance, demolition, recycling and reuse.
67Framework for Development of ISO XXXXX by TC71/SC8
- ISO XXXXX may cover the contamination of water
and soil due to the leaching of heavy metals from
concrete, and noise and vibration in
construction.
68Interface of Existing ISO Environmental Standards
and ISO XXXXX by TC71/SC8
ISO 14040 (LCA)
ISO 14025 (EPD)
ISO 15686-6 Consideration of environmental
impacts in SLP for building and constructed
assets DESIGN OPTIONS
ISO/FDIS 21930 Environmental declarations of
building products
ISO XXXXX Environmental management for concrete
and concrete structures
69ISO XXXXX Environmental Management for Concrete
and Concrete Structures
- Part 1 General principles
- Part 2 Preparation of inventory unit data and
system - boundaries
- Part 3 Raw materials and concrete production
- Part 4 Execution of concrete structures
- Part 5 Maintenance of concrete structures
- Part 6 Demolition and reuse of concrete
structures - Part 7 Recycling of concrete
- Part 8 Environmental labels and declaration of
concrete - and concrete structures
- Part 9 Environmental design of concrete
structures
70ISO XXXXX-1Environmental management for concrete
and concrete structuresPart 1 General principles
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Scope
- 3 Normative references
- 4 Terms and definitions
- 5 Description of general framework for
environmental consideration - 6 Assessment of environmental performance
- 7 Environmental labeling and declaration
- 8 Critical review (Verification)
- 9 Additional environmental information and
reporting
71Characteristics of Concrete
- Consume large amounts of resources and energy
- Primarily comprise cement, which emits a large
amount of CO2 during its production - Utilize industrial wastes and byproducts for
cement production - Use different aggregates in different regions
- Be delivered in the form of half-finished
products to the job site
72Characteristics of Concrete Structures
- They are made into a wide variety of forms in
various environment, and demolished, recycled
and disposed of in various forms. - They have a long life span compared with
industrial goods.
73Introduction
- The incorporation of a concept sustainability
into construction sector is necessary. - There are already some ISO environmental
standards (ISO 14000 family, ISO 15686-6, ISO
21930) - ISO XXXXX series supplement the existing ISO
environmental standards. - Accurate evaluation of environmental impacts is
essential for minimizing environmental impacts
and maximizing environmental benefits.
74Introduction(Contd)
- The target audience of this standard group
includes all people involved in concrete and
concrete structures owners, designers, concrete
manufacturers, contractors, users, and those who
develop or draft environmental standard
specification. - This standard group does not cover the
social/economic aspects constituting
sustainability.
75Scope
- This standard provides basic rules on
environmental performance that concrete and
concrete structures should possess. - This standard provides basic rules on
environmental consideration in various activities
related to their production and construction.
76Scope (Contd)
- This standard shall be applied when examining the
introduction of activities with consideration to
the environment and when carrying out the
environmental assessment in the life cycles
considered. - The environments covered by this standard include
the global environment, local environments, and
ambient environments of structures.
77Description of General Framework for
Environmental Consideration
- Basic framework
- Activities divided by timescale
- Environmental effects in spatial scale
- Environmental impact factors in life cycles
78Basic Framework
- In order to reduce environmental impacts related
concrete and concrete structures, it is essential
to adequately manage environmental impacts due to
the corresponding various activities. - Basic flow of environmental management
- a) describe activities
- b) analyze environmental effect
- c) acquire data
- d) assess, interpret, action
79Activities Divided by Timescale
- Material procurement
- Concrete production
- Construction of a concrete structure
- Use/maintenance of the structure
- Demolition/disposal of the structure
- Recycling of concrete debris
- Reuse of demolished members
80Environmental Impact Factors in Life Cycles
- CO2, NOx, SOx, dust
- Radon-222
- Hexavalent chromium
- Nonyl phenol derivative
- Resource consumption (fossil fuel, nonmetalic
mineral(limestone), water, iron) - Recycled
81Environmental Impact Factors in Life Cycles
(Contd)
- Change in land use
- Noise/vibration
- Volatile organic compound
- Consideration of environmental benefit
- Impact reduction by service life extension
- Heat accumulating effect
82Environmental Effects in Spatial Scale
- Global environment (global warming, destruction
of ozone layer) - Regional environment (acid rain, natural resource
depletion, air pollution) - Ambient environment of the structure (water
pollution, soil pollution, noise/vibration/dust)
83Assessment of Environmental Performance - General
- LCA
- Without LCA
- Partially including LCA
- In any case, the premises including
assumptions, range, methods employed, and
interpretation of the results shall be clarified
and documented.
84Assessment of Environmental Performance
Preparation for LCA
- Inventory data
- The inventory data sources shall be
clearly identified. - System boundaries
- The system boundaries, which are
necessary for presenting the physical range, time
range and resources to be considered, shall be
clearly defined.
85Environmental Issues to be Considered in LCA
- Material use
- Energy use
- Water use
- Land use
- Waste production
- Contamination to soil and water
- Noise
- Odour
- Others
86Implementation of LCA
- Life cycle inventory analysis
- Life cycle impact assessment
- - Impact categories (ex. global warming)
- - Category indicators (ex. CO2-
equivalents)
- - Category endpoints (ex. disease,
- ecosystem
destruction) - Life cycle interpretation equivalents)
87Other Assessments Than LCA or Partially including
LCA
- CASBEE
- LEED
- BREEAM
- Others
- The ISO standards should play an
important role to provide a platform and
fundamental rules for those tools.
88Other Aspects in ISO XXXXX EMCC Part 1 - General
Principle
- Action
- Environmental labelling and declaration
- Critical review (Verification)
- Additional environmental information
- - Impact and potential impacts on
biodiversity - - hazard and risk assessment on human
health - - Others
- Reporting
89Benefits of Standardizations on EMCC by Concrete
Sector
- Fulfillment of social accountability as
concrete/construction sector - Clarification of environmental benefits from
buildings and civil engineering structures - Stimulation of the potential for decision-maker
or market-driven continuous environmental
improvement
90LETS WORK TOGETHER FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS !!!