CLIMATE CHANGE
As an industry leader in calcium-based solutions, in business for over 75 years, Graymont has the privilege of supplying solutions that are essential to healthy, modern societies, and crucial to a decarbonized economy.
Graymont and Climate Action
Among a myriad of vital applications, lime is used in the purification of drinking water; the treatment of wastewater; in agriculture; for scrubbing air emissions from incinerators, power plants and industrial plants; in the manufacture of steel, paper, and glass; and in the production of critical minerals and materials necessary for a decarbonized world. Lime is also part of the solution to reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions as it does re-carbonize under certain circumstances, hence removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Notwithstanding its positive contributions to the global economy, and society at large, the lime industry is facing a climate-change challenge: the ‘calcination’, or burning, of limestone to produce quicklime is an emission-intensive process. The lime industry, along with steel, cement, and other industries with hard-to-abate emissions, is a significant source of GHG emissions. With climate change at the forefront of today’s environmental concerns, Graymont recognizes its responsibility to further reduce its carbon footprint — and to collaboratively work with other industry participants to help secure a place for lime as a vital element of tomorrow’s decarbonized world.
COMMITTED TO PROGRESS
EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
GLOBAL ECONOMIC GROWTH
GRAYMONT EMISSIONS PROFILE
Emissions Profile
The ‘calcination’ or burning of limestone to produce quicklime is an energy-intensive process that has categorized the lime industry, along with steel, cement and others, as significant sources of GHG emissions.
2024 Performance
Graymont’s overall emissions intensity, that is the volume of GHG emissions per tonne of lime produced (including both process and combustion emissions), decreased by more than 2% from 2023 levels. Our combustion-only emissions decreased by 6% percent from 2023 levels, more than 24% below our 2004 baseline level.
This decrease was driven by the increased use of natural gas as opposed to solid fuels.
In 2024, Graymont emitted 5.2 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent from its facilities. CO2 comes directly out of the stone during the chemical transformation process, accounting for the largest portion of Graymont’s GHG emissions. The fossil fuels most commonly utilized to fire our lime kilns represent the second largest source of CO2 emissions.
Fuel consumed by machinery and equipment as well as indirect emissions from electricity account for the balance of the company’s CO2 emissions