Overview

As with the power, transportation, and buildings sectors, decarbonizing industry is critical to achieving our climate goals—and a key opportunity to advance environmental justice. Most industrial emissions come from the production of a small set of carbon-intensive products, including basic chemicals, iron and steel, cement and concrete, aluminum, glass, and paper. Industrial facilities, which often cluster in low-income communities and communities of color, are also a major source of air and water pollution. Cleaning up this sector is a pressing climate and public health priority; it will also help spur economic development and create jobs for communities who urgently need them.

The amount of U.S. emissions that stems from the industrial sector, a combination of the outputs from its practices as well as the power it consumes for its operations

7%

The percentage of annual global greenhouse gas emissions can be traced back to Portland cement, the main binding ingredient of concrete—the most common building material on earth.

A view through a bronze metal railing of an industrial site near a body of water in the South Side of Chicago

Residents of Chicago’s South Side have grappled for decades with dirty industries, including steel mills, coal plants, manufacturing plants, and storage facilities, the result of unfair policies and practices that have left communities of color and low-income residents overburdened with toxic air pollution and other environmental health hazards.

Credit:

Sebastián Hidalgo for NRDC

Solutions

We advocate for state, federal, and global climate investments in research and development, deployment of breakthrough technologies, and other reforms in key industrial sectors. Here are our current priorities:

Zero out emissions in the U.S. cement and concrete sector

Cement and concrete are critical to clean energy infrastructure, climate adaptation, and development. We support innovation that ensures cement and concrete makers—among the manufacturing sector’s most polluting industries—adapt to a clean future. We’re calling on state and federal leaders to include incentives in climate-related legislation that will encourage these businesses to make better use of existing energy efficiency measures, while also scaling up the deployment of new technologies like carbon capture, utilization, and storage. In California, we sponsored a law that puts the state’s cement industry on a path to net-zero emissions no later than 2045. We’re also advocating for the inclusion of low-carbon concrete and cement mandates in the federal Buy Clean Task Force that would extend to major infrastructure projects carried out by the U.S. Department of Transportation and other federal agencies. We are also seeking synergies with NRDC’s efforts to promote low-carbon cement and buildings in China.

Clean up the metals sector

As with cement, the federal government must support innovations that reduce the environmental impact of steel and aluminum production. We’re advocating for funding to help industrial manufacturers generate better data on their emissions. We’re also calling for direct investments to retool existing plants and build first-in-class plants that can produce ultra-low-emission steel and other materials using transformative technologies. Now is a crucial time to invest in the transformation of metals manufacturing, as the government carries out its Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which will rely on the procurement of steel for bridge repairs and other purposes. 

Did You Know?

Building materials are typically a small fraction of the costs of a total construction project, but are often responsible for the bulk of its greenhouse gas footprint

Phase down HFCs around the globe

We’re working with nations under the U.N. Montreal Protocol to implement the Kigali Amendment, an agreement among more than 120 countries to phase down hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, the potent greenhouse gases used in air conditioning, insulating foam, and more. This includes advocating for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to uphold its duties under the agreement and ensuring that companies across the manufacturing and chemical sectors begin switching over to next-generation technologies in the products they make, sell, buy, and use. We also guide state-level updates on regulations, incentives, and building codes that ensure a transition to climate-friendlier HFC alternatives. In India, our team is producing groundbreaking technical research on how the country can phase down HFCs to help support policymakers as they build a national strategy for meeting India’s commitment to the Kigali Amendment.

Advance zero-emissions, green hydrogen

Zero-emissions green hydrogen could play a pivotal role in supporting the deep decarbonization of the U.S. and world economy. However, we must take care not to turn it into a climate problem by deploying it as a solution where it is more costly and less efficient than other technologies (for example, to fuel our cars or heat our buildings). With this in mind, NRDC is pushing the U.S. Department of Energy to identify and advance the use cases that hydrogen is best suited to decarbonize, such as steelmaking, maritime shipping, and aviation. We are also working with key ministries in India to develop catalytic financial tools to help the country support green hydrogen.

“Because industrial decarbonization is being driven by technologies that exist today, we can invest now to cut emissions at our factories and help them make the low-carbon industrial products the United States and the world will increasingly rely on.” 

Sasha Stashwick, director, industrial policy, Climate & Clean Energy Program

A view looking onto the stage at the 28th meeting of the Parties to the Montreal Protocol in Kigali, Rwanda, in 2016, with delegate seated in the audience

Delegates meet at the 28th meeting of the Parties to the Montreal Protocol in Kigali, Rwanda, in 2016. In October 2022, the United States formally ratified the Kigali Amendment, a climate treaty that commits the 145 participating countries to reducing total HFC production 80 to 85 percent by the late 2040s. HFCs are manmade chemicals commonly used in air conditioners, refrigerators, insulating foams, and other applications that, when leaked into the air, pack hundreds—even thousands—of times the heat-trapping punch of carbon dioxide. 

Credit:

Ministry of Environment - Rwanda, CC BY-ND 4.0

Progress

  • Several U.S. states are making strides toward ramping up investment, development, and procurement of low-carbon concrete for use in public works and other infrastructure projects. In California, NRDC is sponsoring legislation to add concrete to the existing Buy Clean program. We also helped pass the Low-Embodied-Carbon Concrete Leadership Act in 2021 in New York (significant progress given New York City’s reputation as “the concrete jungle”). The law serves as a model for other states and the federal government to follow and build upon. Colorado and New Jersey are considering similar legislation. 
  • China and India have ratified the Kigali Amendment to the Montreal Protocol, which has globally significant climate implications: The global shift away from HFCs is expected to avoid close to 0.5 degrees Celsius of warming by the end of this century, and HFCs from China and India, where demand for air-conditioning is skyrocketing, represent a significant share.
  • Enacted at the end of 2020, the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act mandates an economy-wide 85 percent phasedown in HFC supply over the next 15 years—the same schedule the United States must follow under the Kigali Amendment. Climate-friendlier alternatives are already taking HFCs’ place, steadily and surely.

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