Reaching Our Goal
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Partnership for Change
The PCA Roadmap to Carbon Neutrality is an ambitious plan. Our industry can reach net zero by 2050, but we will struggle to do it alone. We will need policymakers and regulators, architects and contractors, state governments and others to work with us as we build a sustainable future.
Together for Progress
Our industry is already working in partnership with federal and state government agencies, and with sustainability-focused organizations. Take a look at some results.
All 50 state Departments of Transportation in the U.S. have approved the use of low-carbon Portland-limestone cement.
Get on Board!
Invest in R&D
To meet the 2050 carbon neutrality goal, the cement and concrete industry needs government support for innovation across the value chain. Policymakers can prioritize research and funding for ongoing industry efforts.
Streamline Permitting Rules
Several existing rules, plus uncertainty around rule changes, get in the way of plant modernization—especially with regard to CCUS implementation. Federal updates to regulatory practices will be crucial to meeting our goal.
Adopt a Life Cycle Approach in Procurement
Procurement policies often incentivize sustainability—but the analyses that determine impact tend to be cradle-to-gate rather than cradle-to cradle. The cement industry’s ability to invest in green practices depends on incentives that consider the full life cycle of the product.
And There’s More!
Read our full analysis of how specific policies will allow the industry to meet the important sustainability goals set in the PCA Roadmap to Carbon Neutrality.
Developing A Lower Carbon Concrete Protocol
PCA and other collaborators across the cement-concrete-construction value chain have formed voluntary guidelines, intending to lower the carbon of a concrete project without sacrificing long-term performance characteristics.
How Impact is Quantified
Current rules and guidelines for evaluating the environmental impact of materials and their manufacture are plant- rather than lifecycle focused. This skews the result and hampers progress.