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Laing O'Rourke to use low carbon concrete on all UK projects

Low Carbon concrete will be used on all new UK projects by Laing O'Rourke, in a bid to accelerate the company’s progress towards its net zero targets.

The change, introduced with immediate effect, applies to all new projects that began main construction on or after 1 April 2023 and will result in a significant reduction in the company’s scope 3 carbon emissions.

Following a long-term research programme co-funded by Laing O’Rourke and Innovate UK, and in collaboration with the University of Cambridge and Sheffield University’s Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC), the business has proven that a range of low carbon concrete options can be successfully deployed on projects as a like-for-like substitute for traditional concrete.

The overall carbon reduction will be 28 per cent when compared with the company’s concrete usage in 2022. This equates to a saving of 14.4 million kgCO2e, which is the same as planting 120,000 trees or 94 hectares of forest.

Cathal O’Rourke, Laing O’Rourke’s newly appointed chief operating officer, said reducing all carbon emissions was a priority for the firm.

“We’ve committed to being a net zero company before 2050 and we are looking at every possible measure to accelerate our progress," he said. 

"In construction, the greatest challenge is reducing scope 3 emissions – the embodied carbon in purchased materials.

“The built environment makes a significant contribution to global warming and constructors must work with clients and design partners to deploy new technologies and innovations that make modern methods the norm and enable us to build in less carbon intensive ways.”

The UK Government welcomed the move, with Construction Minister, Nusrat Ghani, stating that reducing carbon emissions from concrete was "essential" to achieving net zero carbon by 2050.

"I'm pleased to see the leadership Laing O’Rourke is showing, through innovating and adopting the use of low-carbon concrete on all the construction projects it delivers,” Ghani said.

Rossella Nicolin, Laing O’Rourke’s head of sustainability for Europe, said that the expertise of the specialist businesses that make up the company’s internal supply chain had helped introduce the policy so rapidly across all new projects.

“The expertise of our in-house concrete technologists, the experts who operate our advanced manufacturing facility in Nottinghamshire (the Laing O’Rourke Centre of Excellence for Modern Construction, CEMC), and our supply chain partners, have all contributed to this significant step forward," she said.

“Last year, 43 per cent of the concrete products we manufactured for our live projects were low carbon. It’s exciting to think this will rise to 100 per cent this year, and that very soon all our new projects will only use low carbon concrete. 

"I want to thank the team whose hard work has made it possible.”

Laing O’Rourke’s low carbon concrete uses lower carbon alternatives to Portland cement. 

These include GGBS (Ground Granulated Blast-furnace Slag) and PFA (Pulverised Fly Ash), both of which are industrial by-products with a much lower carbon footprint.  

The company recognises that this is the first step in a longer journey to decarbonisation. 

Its ongoing research programme focuses on wider scale deployment of cement-free options, which are ultra-low carbon, and it expects to introduce more of these materials going forward.

 

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