The Denver Post

Agency awards $6B for green steel, cement and even macaroni factories

- By Brad Plumer

WASHINGTON>> The Biden administra­tion plans to spend up to $6 billion on new technologi­es to cut carbon dioxide emissions from heavy industries such as steel, cement, chemicals and aluminum, which are all enormous contributo­rs to global warming but which have so far been incredibly difficult to clean up.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said Monday that her agency would partially fund 33 projects in 20 states to test methods for curbing emissions from a wide variety of factories and industrial plants, calling it “the single largest industrial decarboniz­ation investment in American history.”

Constelliu­m, an aluminum producer, would receive up to $75 million to build a first-ofa-kind aluminum casting plant in Ravenswood, W.VA., that can run on cleaner burning hydrogen fuels rather than natural gas.

Kraft Heinz, a food manufactur­er, would get up to $170.9 million to install electric boilers and heat pumps at 10 facilities across the country, where they would be used to generate the large amounts of heat needed for things like drying macaroni without directly burning fossil fuels.

Cleveland-cliffs, a steel manufactur­er, would get up to $500 million to help retire a large coalconsum­ing blast furnace in Middletown, Ohio, and replace it with two furnaces that use electricit­y to turn scrap into steel.

The company would also test ways to produce steel using hydrogen.

While the projects themselves would put a relatively small dent in U.S. emissions, Granholm said the goal was to demonstrat­e novel technologi­es that can scale up rapidly and “set a new gold standard for clean manufactur­ing in the United States and around the world.”

Heavy industry is one of the nation’s largest sources of planetwarm­ing pollution, accounting for roughly one-quarter of all emissions.

Many factories burn coal or natural gas to produce the heat needed to create steam, temper glass or turn iron into steel. Cement-makers emit carbon dioxide as part of the process of transformi­ng limestone into cement. Chemical producers use oil and gas as raw materials for their products.

In theory, there are technologi­es that can cut emissions. Industrial heat pumps or thermal batteries could help factories generate heat from renewable electricit­y.

Cement-makers could capture and bury their carbon dioxide. Steel-makers could use clean hydrogen instead of coal. But many of those solutions are expensive and in their infancy.

“It’s different from the electricit­y sector, where widely available alternativ­es to fossil fuels like wind, solar and batteries have come down dramatical­ly in cost,” said Morgan Bazilian, a professor of public policy at the Colorado School of Mines. “With industry, we haven’t yet seen clear winners emerge at the price needed.”

Policymake­rs have also been hesitant to crack down on industrial emissions for fear that factories and jobs could move abroad to places with looser environmen­tal rules.

While the Biden administra­tion has announced stringent limits for carbon dioxide emissions from vehicles and power plants, it has so far avoided similar regulation­s for industrial sectors like steel or cement. Instead, the administra­tion has focused on funding new technologi­es in the hopes that they will get cheaper and become widely adopted.

Separately, various federal agencies have announced plans to buy steel, cement, asphalt and glass made with cleaner processes, in an effort to create a market for low-carbon industrial materials.

The money for the projects in Monday’s announceme­nt comes from the Energy Department’s Industrial Demonstrat­ions Program, which was funded by the 2021 bipartisan infrastruc­ture law and the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

The 33 projects selected will need to undergo further negotiatio­ns with the agency before receiving final funding.

One is Sublime Systems, a startup exploring cleaner ways to make cement.

Traditiona­lly, cement manufactur­ers burn large quantities of coal or gas to generate temperatur­es in excess of 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit, which transforms limestone into lime and releases carbon dioxide as part of the chemical conversion.

In contrast, Sublime uses a process powered purely by electricit­y that doesn’t require high heat or release carbon dioxide.

The company has tested its technology at a small pilot facility, and an award from the Energy Department, worth up to $87 million, would help the company build its first commercial plant in Holyoke, Mass.

That funding is valuable, said Leah Ellis, CEO of Sublime. Many novel technologi­es to cut industrial emissions “are too expensive for traditiona­l venture capitalist­s and too risky for convention­al project financiers,” she said.

Having the Energy Department share the costs of early projects “accelerate­s the scale-up of these technologi­es which must be developed and deployed globally as quickly as possible” to fight climate change.

The Energy Department could also fund several projects that use an emerging technology called thermal energy storage, which can take intermitte­nt electricit­y from wind or solar farms to gradually heat up bricks or other materials, which can then be used to produce steady heat for industrial processes.

“The area that’s often written off as the hardest to decarboniz­e is the industrial sector,” said Ali Zaidi, President Joe Biden’s national climate adviser. But, he added, “these projects are such a great example of the breadth and diversity of technologi­es that we can deploy to do this decarboniz­ation work.”

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