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Five cement plants received special
recognition by the Portland Cement Association (PCA) and Cement
Americas magazine for continuous environmental improvement
at PCA’s Spring Board Meeting in New York, N.Y., on
April 25, 2005.
The Fourth Annual Cement Industry Environment and Energy Awards
recognize individual facilities that exemplify the spirit
of continuous environmental improvement and support this spirit
with action.
The awards recognize plants in six categories (listed by category,
company, and plant location):
- Overall Environmental Excellence: St. Lawrence Cement,
Mississauga, Ontario
- Environmental Performance: St. Lawrence Cement, Mississauga,
Ontario
- Land Stewardship: CEMEX Inc., Fairborn, Ohio
- Outreach: Lafarge North America, Inc., Tulsa, Okla.
- Innovation: CEMEX Inc., Knoxville, Tenn.
- Energy Efficiency: California Portland Cement Company,
Colton, Calif.
Overall Environmental Excellence
St. Lawrence Cement – Mississauga, Ontario
St. Lawrence Cement’s Mississauga plant was recognized
as the winner of the Overall Environmental Excellence Award
for its environmental achievement in several areas. The facility
won the environmental performance category and was the runner-up
for the outreach, innovation, and energy efficiency categories.
In addition, St. Lawrence made an investment in equipment
designed to reduce noise output. As a result of its efforts,
the plant reduced its number of noise complaints to zero.
The Mississauga facility has also been recognized by the Ontario
Ministry of the Environment, Canada’s Climate Change
Voluntary Challenge and Registry Inc., and local environmental
leaders for its efforts.
Environmental Performance Award
St. Lawrence Cement – Mississauga, Ontario
St. Lawrence Cement’s Mississauga plant won the Environmental
Performance Award, which honors facilities that take steps
beyond those contained in environmental laws, regulations,
permits and requirements to minimize their impact on the environment.
In 2004, Mississauga implemented an environmental management
system and was the first cement plant in North America to
achieve ISO 14001 certification. The plant achieved secondary
plume opacity of zero percent, it voluntarily tested stack
emissions, reduced roll-off waste by 30 percent and waste
management costs by 22 percent, utilized by-products to reduce
natural resource consumption, and further reduced emissions
of nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide by
8 percent to 16 percent below already low levels.
Land Stewardship
CEMEX Inc. – Fairborn, Ohio
CEMEX Fairborn, Ohio, won the Land Stewardship Award, which
recognizes efforts to protect and enhance the surrounding
land through landscaping, species protection, and remediation
and rehabilitation of quarries and wetlands.
The Ohio facility participated in two land rehabilitation
projects in 2004. In one project, CEMEX made progress on the
reclamation of a 200-acre limestone quarry. This included
a complete reclamation release of 52 acres and partial release
of 150 acres that were recently vegetated. The second project
was the demolition of an 80-year old cement manufacturing
plant that was closed in the 1990s and was the source of aesthetic
concerns for its neighbors. CEMEX’s voluntary effort
proved to be a significant task as the building needed asbestos
abatement. Construction rubble was segregated so that inert
materials could be used to backfill and reclaim an old quarry.
Nearly 10 acres were backfilled with these materials.
Outreach
Lafarge North America Inc. – Tulsa, Okla.
Lafarge’s Tulsa facility won the Outreach Award, which
recognizes facilities that strive to enhance community, employee,
and government relations through communication, partnerships,
voluntary efforts, and contributions. The Tulsa facility’s
outreach program in 2004 included wildlife habitat conservation
and renewal, educational alliances, participation in community
and environmental organizations, plant tours, community affairs
activities, charitable sponsorships, environmental educational
alliances, and Earth Day festivities. In addition, the plant’s
environmental manager serves on a local air quality committee.
Innovation
CEMEX Inc. – Knoxville, Tenn.
The CEMEX plant in Knoxville won the Innovation Award, which
recognizes industry leaders in the development and application
of innovation technologies and techniques relevant to environmental
protection or energy efficiency. The Knoxville facility explored
alternative abatement methods to reduce nitrogen oxides (NOX)
beyond regulatory requirements. After evaluating various technologies,
the plant installed a water injection system, that studies
showed would reduce NOX emissions by approximately 15 percent.
The water injection technology was simple to use and install
and proved to be a cost-effective innovation. In 2004, the
plant also developed a continuous monitoring system to measure
sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide emissions. Moving forward,
CEMEX has committed over a million dollars to researching
and developing new technologies for the Knoxville facility.
Energy Efficiency
California Portland Cement Company – Colton, Calif.
The California Portland Cement Company won the Energy Efficiency
Award, which evaluates energy planning, applications of efficient
technologies and practices, and climate change mitigation
efforts. Using the Environmental Protection Agency’s
Energy Star program as a guide, the facility implemented a
corporate energy management program along with an energy management
team. The plant’s policy establishes baseline energy
use through new and existing metering and other reporting
methods, sets goals based on benchmarking and industry best
practices, requires periodic audits to determine savings opportunities,
implements energy saving ideas through capital spending and
maintenance, and provides training and awareness of energy
efficiency best practices. The implementation of this program
resulted in an energy consumption reduction of 4.5 percent
from 2003 levels, which translates into savings of $842,000.
History of the Awards
The awards program was created in 2000 by the Portland Cement
Association as part of its renewed environment and energy
strategic plan for the U.S. cement industry. PCA and Cement
Americas magazine presented the first Cement Industry Environmental
Awards in 2002 to the winners for 2001.
“The cement industry was one of the first industries
to tackle climate change by developing policies and improving
manufacturing processes that benefit the global environment,”
said Andy O’Hare, PCA’s vice president of regulatory
affairs. “The awards program is recognition of these
ongoing efforts.”
The awards honor activities conducted during the previous
calendar year, and the program is open to any cement manufacturing
plant in North America. Judges for the awards represent independent
groups such as PCA, Cement Americas magazine, the Cement Association
of Canada, World Resources Institute, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, and the World Wildlife Fund.
About PCA
Based in Skokie, Ill., the Portland Cement Association represents
cement companies in the United States and Canada. It conducts
market development, engineering, research, education, and
public affairs programs.
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