Case Study 9
Bamboo Fibre Reinforced Cement Board for Carbon Sequestration
Gunter Pauli
ZERI Foundation
Keywords: Japan, Indonesia, Columbia, construction materials, bamboo,
cement, N S, S
S.
Summary
Cement board has become a standard construction material in the tropics. The
mixing of cement with mineral fibres or synthetic substitutes has evolved into
a major industry. Taiheyo Cement, the second largest cement producer in the
world, invested in a special research programme in association with the Zero
Emissions programme to substitute the mineral and synthetic fibres with natural
ones. This has now been successfully implemented.
The cement industry is under tremendous pressure to improve its carbon dioxide
balance. The massive production has been partly reduced and marginally offset
with reforestation programmes, but the overall balance remains unfavourable.
The search for natural fibres, which sequester carbon dioxide, was considered
a practical option. Scientists were sceptical, however, since the mixing of
organic material (bamboo fibres) with inorganic (cement) has always been difficult.
The residual sugars from organic material inhibit the crystallisation of cement,
reducing the quality and price performance.
Approach
Researchers identified bamboo-specific fungi that would eliminate all sugars
after crushing the bamboo. This process saves water and offers a good quality
fibre with no residual sugars. The blending of 50% cement with 50% bamboo fibres
reverses the carbon dioxide balance. Since the cement board has an expected
life of 30 years, the fast growing species like Bambusa vulgaris offers a unique
opportunity for the construction industry to adhere to the Kyoto Protocol.
The research was undertaken in Japan, but the first pilot plant was located
in Java, Indonesia, just one hour outside Jakarta. The proximity to a cheap
and abundant supply of bamboo is critical in the financial viability of the
operation. On the basis of this first experience, an improved version of the
production technology has been obtained. A second factory is now being planned
in Manizales, Colombia, the centre of bamboo forests in Latin America. This
permits the fast and pragmatic transfer of technologies developed in Japan to
be fine-tuned in Indonesia and then transferred to Latin America.
Impacts
The use of bamboo fibre has a positive effect on the carbon balance, but it
also changes the look of the city. Whereas asbestos or synthetic fibre cement
boards were strong, their grey look rendered the horizon of any city unattractive.
The wheat-yellow look of the bamboo fibre cement board favourably changes the
impression a city offers to the outside world.
Since there are some 1,300 species of bamboo and the material is abundant and
easy to grow, the use of bamboo fibre offers numerous benefits. Bamboo forests
are known to have a positive influence on the hydrobalance of a region, are
effectively used as a measure against soil erosion, and reinstate a natural
habitat that dominated the tropical highlands until agricultural and industrial
development began one hundred and fifty years ago.
Lessons Learned
This programme demonstrates that there are unexpected opportunities for carbon
sequestration. These approaches require innovative biotechnologies such as the
effective use of sugar digesting fungi enzymes and the combination of organic
and inorganic materials. The programme of Taiheyo Cement has demonstrated that
this is not only feasible, it is commercially viable. And even better, the consumer
has access to a quality product that leaves a beautiful impression.
Bibliography
ZERI website: www.zeri.org
Contact
Mr. Noriaki Hayama
Director Research and Development
Taiheyo Cement
Fax: 81-43-498 38 09
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