A collaboration of industry, located in Derbyshire and Staffordshire, along with neighbouring industries in Cheshire, Peak Cluster will decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime industry.
The newly released report by Mott MacDonald into the economic benefits shows that Peak Cluster will safeguard over 2,100 existing jobs and create a further 1,500 roles throughout the construction and lifetime of the project.
Peak Cluster is made up of four of the UK’s leading cement and lime producers - Tarmac, Breedon, Lhoist and Aggregate Industries, alongside the Lostock Sustainable Energy Plant, working together with Progressive Energy, a low carbon energy project developer. A partnership with the Morecombe Net Zero Cluster for storage of the captured carbon was recently announced.
Production of low carbon cement and lime will create value in the UK as sustainably produced materials are essential for construction of critical infrastructure, such as roads, hospitals and schools. The need for an acceleration of delivery of new dedicated infrastructure to facilitate carbon capture and storage was highlighted in the National Infrastructure Assessment published on 18 October. The assessment specifically highlighted the need for the Peak District to be part of that infrastructure.
John Egan, Peak Cluster project director, Progressive Energy said, “This report unequivocally demonstrates that decarbonisation of this vital sector is an economic, as well as an environmental, imperative. We have the opportunity to decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime, to reduce CO2 emissions from Derbyshire and Staffordshire by nearly a quarter and to enable domestic supply of sustainable construction materials - all whilst protecting and creating thousands of jobs.”