thyssenkrupp wins contract to modernise French cement plant

thyssenkrupp's cement technologies business unit has received an order to build a turnkey cement production line at the Ciments Calcia plant in Airvault, west France.
December 9, 2021
By Liam McLoughlin
thyssenkrupp says the Airvault plant's emissions will be substantially reduced through the use of waste as an alternative fuel. Image: Daniel Garandeau
thyssenkrupp says the Airvault plant's emissions will be substantially reduced through the use of waste as an alternative fuel. Image: Daniel Garandeau

The line, with a production capacity of 4,000 tons of clinker per day, is to be built at the Airvault site to replace the two existing lines. Ciments Calcia, a subsidiary of HeidelbergCement Group, says the aim is to almost double clinker production at the Airvault site. The contract value has not been disclosed.

Pablo Hofelich, CEO of cement technologies at Germany-based thyssenkrupp, commented: "In this flagship project, our latest innovations in sustainability and safety are leading the way to a future-proof cement production, with significantly reduced emissions.”

thyssenkrupp says that, by implementing specific processes, the plant’s energy performance will be improved while reducing its thermal and electrical consumption. It adds that the plant's greenhouse gas emissions and carbon footprint will be substantially reduced through the use of waste as an alternative fuel to fossil energy.

The plant is designed to allow for conversion to oxyfuel technology in the future, to efficiently separate carbon dioxide and thereby facilitate carbon capture and storage at a later stage.

The main equipment for the raw material preparation includes a double-shaft hammer crusher with a capacity of 1200 t/h, a longitudinal blending bed, a quadropol QMR² 45/23 vertical roller mill with a throughput of 370 t/h and a tangential blending silo with a storage capacity of 10,000 t for the raw meal.
The kiln line consists of a single-string, thyssenkrupp 5-stage dopol cyclone preheater with integral calciner suitable for the use of alternative fuels and a 3-support rotary kiln, followed by a last generation polytrack clinker cooler. The plant also includes a preparation workshop for alternative fuels (SRF - Solid Recovered Fuels) as well as proven and reliable dedusting systems.   

A new construction method is being implemented for the erection of the preheater tower at the Airvault plant. The preheater modules, including brickwork and electric systems, are preassembled in parallel and almost entirely at ground level.

thyssenkrupp says the Airvault cement plant, scheduled to start-up by mid-2024, will become a benchmark plant in terms of decarbonisation and environmental protection.

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