Cement and concrete as carbon sinks: Transforming a climate challenge into a carbon storage opportunity
Other text in scientific journal, 2025

Cement and concrete, while traditionally recognized as one of the main contributors to anthropogenic CO2 emissions, also have untapped capacity to serve as substantial carbon sinks. This paper provides a comprehensive perspective on how engineered mineral carbonation can transform cement-based materials into carbon storage systems. We briefly review the fundamental mechanisms of CO2 storage in cementitious systems and highlight current limitations in understanding of reaction kinetics, end-phase regulation and performance control. The effect of CO2 uptake on material performance is critically evaluated with respect to the fresh performance, mechanical properties and long-term durability. Emphasis is placed on the valorization of alkaline industrial residues and emerging carbonatable binders, which offer sequestration capacity and sustainable resource use. A strategic roadmap is proposed with integration of scientific innovation, regulatory alignment, and carbon accounting in the life cycle, to accelerate the adoption of carbon-storing concrete. This perspective provides a framework to advance cement and concrete as engineered carbon sinks and supports the transition to a climate-positive construction industry.

Carbon storage

Cement and concrete

Mineral carbonation

Life cycle analysis

Durability

Author

Liming Huang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Technology

Baodong Li

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Technology

Xinping Zhu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)

Ning Li

University of Manchester

Xin Zhang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Carbon Capture Science and Technology

27726568 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 100490

Unraveling carbonation mechanism for enhancing carbon storage through mineralization

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2024-00569), 2024-09-01 -- 2026-09-01.

Post Norm Supersulfated Cement

Tillväxtverket (20359962 och 20361690), 2023-06-01 -- 2026-06-01.

European Commission (EC), 2023-06-01 -- 2026-06-01.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Materials Engineering

Environmental Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.ccst.2025.100490

More information

Latest update

9/9/2025 7