Abstract

The African cement, concrete and construction business is growing at rapid pace. The cement sales are expected to grow rapidly until 2050. The number of newly built cement plants increases dramatically and in addition more cements are being imported from outside the continent, e.g. from Turkey, Pakistan, Indonesia, and China, driven by overcapacities in the countries of origin. This causes a high number of potentials and challenges at the same time. Newly built cement plants can operate directly at best technological state of the art and thus incorporate more sustainable technologies as well as produce new and more sustainable products such as cements blended with sustainable supplementary cementitious materials such as calcined clays, and industrial or agricultural by products. At the same time the new variety of binding agent as well as the international imports, which are driven by price considerations, make the cement market prone to quality scatter. This puts pressure on the quality control regulations and institutions to ensure safety of construction, healthy application, and environmental safety for the population. The paper presents possible solutions to build up the rapidly increasing African cement production more sustainably than in the rest of the world as well as the related challenges and obstacles that need to be overcome. Based on experiences with a series of pan-African cement testing laboratory proficiency schemes conclusions are made on technical, regulative and political level.

Highlights

  • Abstract.The African cement, concrete and construction business is growing at rapid pace

  • Results from a pan-African cement proficiency testing scheme (PACE-PTS), which is conducted as cooperation between BAM Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing and the German Metrology Institute (PTB) with support of the University of Cape Town illustrate the challenges related to quality control procedures in the cement and concrete area

  • Most laboratories were from sub-Saharan Africa with strong participation from S

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Summary

Cement and construction technology from a global point of view

Concrete construction has always been a local business of global concern. Due to the indispensable nature of concrete, globally and locally the material has an enormous ecologic, economic and social dimension. It consists of the elements that form 98% of the outer Earth’s crust [2] Regardless of their possible performance, materials based on the complementary 2% are not feasible for building global infrastructures and habitats, due to the limited volume of required resources.it has pointed out that compared to other construction materials concrete shows the lowest embodied energy and the lowest embodied carbon [3]. Concrete is of highest importancefor adequate housing that gives shelter and safety, and lets the populace participate in the wealth and growth of economies. It provides the foundation for adequate life and future perspectives, which contributessignificantly to reduction of global social problemse.g. related to health, social unrest, or migration.

Perspectives and peculiarities of the African cement and concrete market
Sustainability potentials in Africa
Experiences from a pan-African cement testing proficiency scheme
Challenges for quality control
Challenges for a safe construction framework
Standard challenges
Way forward
Solutions for alternative materials
Enhanced quality infrastructure
Research capacity
Improved framework for safe construction
Summary and conclusions
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