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Alternate aggregate processing could slash carbon emissions, says report

CO2 - A rock crushing mine
The quantity of global emissions captured would be equivalent to planting a forest of mature trees the size of Germany, the study claims (Image: Dmitry Rukhlenko/Dreamstime.com)

New research suggests that 175 million tonnes of CO2 could be captured annually during construction aggregate processing by using an alternate method.

Mechanochemical processing is a technique that involves the deformation, fracturing and cold wielding of particles during repeated collisions with a ball during high-energy milling.

The authors of the research, from the University of Strathclyde, claim this process would not require additional energy to trap CO2. The research is published in the Nature Sustainability journal.

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