Global database of cement production assets and upstream suppliers

Abstract Cement producers and their investors are navigating evolving risks and opportunities as the sector’s climate and sustainability implications become more prominent. While many companies now disclose greenhouse gas emissions, the majority from carbon-intensive industries appear to delegate em...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nataliya Tkachenko, Kevin Tang, Matthew McCarten, Steven Reece, David Kampmann, Conor Hickey, Maral Bayaraa, Peter Foster, Courtney Layman, Cristian Rossi, Kimberly Scott, Dave Yoken, Christophe Christiaen, Ben Caldecott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2023-10-01
Series:Scientific Data
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-023-02599-w
Description
Summary:Abstract Cement producers and their investors are navigating evolving risks and opportunities as the sector’s climate and sustainability implications become more prominent. While many companies now disclose greenhouse gas emissions, the majority from carbon-intensive industries appear to delegate emissions to less efficient suppliers. Recognizing this, we underscore the necessity for a globally consolidated asset-level dataset, which acknowledges production inputs provenance. Our approach not only consolidates data from established sources like development banks and governments but innovatively integrates the age of plants and the sourcing patterns of raw materials as two foundational variables of the asset-level data. These variables are instrumental in modeling cement production utilization rates, which in turn, critically influence a company’s greenhouse emissions. Our method successfully combines geospatial computer vision and Large Language Modelling techniques to ensure a comprehensive and holistic understanding of global cement production dynamics.
ISSN:2052-4463