Comunicado de prensa corporativo
15 Sep 2023
GEA CEO Stefan Klebert positions the Group as a trailblazer in this field. “‘Engineering for a better world’ signifies our dedication to advancing the sustainable development of key industries with our plants and solutions. With this ambitious approach, we are helping our customers to massively reduce their carbon footprint.” GEA’s carbon capture portfolio integrates proven technologies. These solutions recover waste heat, pretreat gas, capture CO₂ and prepare it either for utilization or storage.
Captured carbon can be stored (CCS) or utilized for industrial processes (CCU). Source: GEA
With a production capacity of 500,000 tons of cement per year, the Phoenix Zementwerke plant in Beckum emits an estimated 1,000 tons of carbon dioxide every day. Data on carbon emissions in the exhaust air from the plant is now being gathered over several months of testing. Based on this data, GEA will then scale up and refine the system for larger emission volumes. The options available encompass both carbon capture and storage (CCS) as well as carbon capture and utilization (CCU). “We view carbon capture as an exceptionally promising technology,” says Marcel Gustav Krogbeumker, Managing Director of Phoenix Zementwerke. “Leveraging GEA’s decades-long expertise in exhaust gas treatment, I am highly optimistic that, together, we will engineer and implement a solution capable of capturing at least 90 percent of our emissions.”
The Managing Director of Phoenix Zementwerke in Beckum, Marcel Gustav Krogbeumker (l.), with Dr. Felix Ortloff, Senior Director Carbon Capture Solutions at GEA. They will analyze the data from the pilot plant and use it to develop the scope for scaling up the system in the next stage. Source: GEA/Tim Luhmann
GEA’s carbon capture portfolio features four plant sizes, with the dimensioning of each dependent upon the waste heat generated in carbon-emitting production processes. Once adapted to the production plant in question, these systems can remove emitted carbon with minimal to zero energy input.
The evident need for action and the market’s readiness to invest indicate that carbon dioxide can be turned from a problem pollutant into valuable input for reuse in other industrial processes. “Every customer has distinct opportunities for carbon utilization. This is why it’s crucial to draw up a comprehensive site plan that explores the options for carbon utilization and the requisite infrastructure,” explains Dr. Felix Ortloff, Senior Director GEA Carbon Capture Solutions. “In the long run, this will lead to a new sector of the economy centered around CO₂.”
Dr. Michael Golek
GEA es uno de los mayores proveedores para la industria alimentaria y para muchos otros sectores de la industria. En 2019 generó unos ingresos consolidados de 4.900 millones de euros aproximadamente.
GEA CEO Stefan Klebert positions the Group as a trailblazer in this field. “‘Engineering for a better world’ signifies our dedication to advancing the sustainable development of key industries with our plants and solutions. With this ambitious approach, we are helping our customers to massively reduce their carbon footprint.” GEA’s carbon capture portfolio integrates proven technologies. These solutions recover waste heat, pretreat gas, capture CO₂ and prepare it either for utilization or storage.
Captured carbon can be stored (CCS) or utilized for industrial processes (CCU). Source: GEA
With a production capacity of 500,000 tons of cement per year, the Phoenix Zementwerke plant in Beckum emits an estimated 1,000 tons of carbon dioxide every day. Data on carbon emissions in the exhaust air from the plant is now being gathered over several months of testing. Based on this data, GEA will then scale up and refine the system for larger emission volumes. The options available encompass both carbon capture and storage (CCS) as well as carbon capture and utilization (CCU). “We view carbon capture as an exceptionally promising technology,” says Marcel Gustav Krogbeumker, Managing Director of Phoenix Zementwerke. “Leveraging GEA’s decades-long expertise in exhaust gas treatment, I am highly optimistic that, together, we will engineer and implement a solution capable of capturing at least 90 percent of our emissions.”
The Managing Director of Phoenix Zementwerke in Beckum, Marcel Gustav Krogbeumker (l.), with Dr. Felix Ortloff, Senior Director Carbon Capture Solutions at GEA. They will analyze the data from the pilot plant and use it to develop the scope for scaling up the system in the next stage. Source: GEA/Tim Luhmann
GEA’s carbon capture portfolio features four plant sizes, with the dimensioning of each dependent upon the waste heat generated in carbon-emitting production processes. Once adapted to the production plant in question, these systems can remove emitted carbon with minimal to zero energy input.
The evident need for action and the market’s readiness to invest indicate that carbon dioxide can be turned from a problem pollutant into valuable input for reuse in other industrial processes. “Every customer has distinct opportunities for carbon utilization. This is why it’s crucial to draw up a comprehensive site plan that explores the options for carbon utilization and the requisite infrastructure,” explains Dr. Felix Ortloff, Senior Director GEA Carbon Capture Solutions. “In the long run, this will lead to a new sector of the economy centered around CO₂.”
Dr. Michael Golek
GEA es uno de los mayores proveedores para la industria alimentaria y para muchos otros sectores de la industria. En 2019 generó unos ingresos consolidados de 4.900 millones de euros aproximadamente.