Cement Plant in India. Approximate location 22.41979, 75.06896.
Cement PlantIndiaCO₂ reported
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant is a cement plant in India with a reported capacity of 90,000 t of cement. It burns limestone in high-temperature rotary kilns to make clinker and cement. It is operated by Sagar Cements (M) Pvt Ltd. By capacity it ranks #159 of 160 cement plants tracked in India. It emits about 40,291 tonnes of CO₂e per year (Climate TRACE) — roughly the tailpipe emissions of 9,392 cars. Its CO₂ per unit of capacity is about 24% above the median cement plant.
Facility data: Climate TRACE v6 (asset-level capacity & CO₂e, CC BY 4.0), id ct-42546499.
Przy 90,000 t of cement, Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant jest poniżej medianę cement plant w India (2,500,000 t of cement). Jego CO₂ na jednostkę pojemności wynosi w przybliżeniu 19% powyżej medianę cement plant. Podsektor: cement. Jako cement plant, wymaga intensywnego ciepła procesowego (typowo 800–1400°C) do swoich głównych operacji przemysłowych — ciepła, które musi być dostarczane przez kotły, piece lub spalanie bezpośrednie, a straty przez nieisolowane zbiorniki i rury stanowią zmarnowane paliwo. Modułowa izolacja demontowalna może zmniejszyć te straty o 80–96%, chłodząc powierzchnie do ≤45°C, z zwrotem inwestycji często poniżej 2 lat. Cementownie ogrzewają wapień do 1.400°C w piecach obracających się — jeden z najgorętszych procesów przemysłowych — i muszą precyzyjnie kontrolować temperaturę na całej długości pieca.
Porównanie pojemności i intensywności CO₂ obliczane na podstawie danych instalacji przemysłowych Climate TRACE; rola sektora oparta na odniesieniau inżynierskim.
This facility's reported annual CO₂e in the everyday equivalents from the US EPA Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies calculator:
Equivalencies: US EPA Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies. Emissions: Climate TRACE.
Reported capacity (t of cement), Climate TRACE v6 (asset-level capacity & CO₂e, CC BY 4.0).
Operated by Sagar Cements (M) Pvt Ltd. All facilities by this operator →
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant sits in a tropical savanna climate zone (Köppen Aw), at 22.4°N in the northern hemisphere.
Köppen zone: Köppen-Geiger world climate classification (Kottek et al. 2006, 0.5° grid).
The #159 largest of 160 cement plants in India by reported capacity.
Coordinates 22.41979, 75.06896. View on OpenStreetMap.
A cement plant like this runs hot equipment that sheds heat continuously: rotary kiln shell, preheater tower, tertiary air duct & kiln hood, clinker-cooler ducts, valves (surface/process temperatures around 200–1,000 °C). These surfaces lose energy to the air year-round; removable modular insulation cuts that loss, brings outer surfaces to ≤45 °C, and unclips for inspection.
60% of cement CO2 is process calcination - NOT insulation-addressable; energy here is the fuel side only.
On an already-insulated site (pipes & valves in cladding / jackets), closing the remaining gaps, flanges and damaged sections and switching to removable covers indicatively recovers about 8,000 MWh/yr (≈ 2,700 t CO₂/yr) — scaled to this site's reported CO₂ within its sector. Bare or damaged surfaces recover several times more.
See Inzonex insulation → Estimate your site →
Indicative, not a measurement. Conservative floor for an already-insulated plant; a TIPCHECK on-site audit gives a measured figure. Industry context: EiiF TIPCHECK — industrial insulation can save ~14 Mtoe/yr in EU, payback typically <2 years.
Bare hot surfaces here exceed the touch-safe limit (EN ISO 13732-1); insulation to ≤45 °C is a worker-safety and compliance win. And before electrification, fuel-switching or CCS, eliminating surface heat loss is the cheapest, fastest, lowest-risk step — audit the bare spots first, rip-and-replace later.
Domestic energy-efficiency grants are limited here; industrial decarbonisation is mainly funded externally:
CBAM. Exporters of cement, steel, aluminium, fertiliser, hydrogen and electricity to the EU face the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism — cutting embedded emissions (efficiency + insulation) lowers the levy.
Routed via national development banks / accredited entities — not a direct factory grant. Verified 2026.
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant is a cement plant in India. It burns limestone in high-temperature rotary kilns to make clinker and cement.
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant has a reported capacity of 90,000 t of cement.
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant emits about 40,291 tonnes of CO₂e per year (Climate TRACE) — roughly the tailpipe emissions of 9,392 cars. That ranks #287 among tracked facilities in India.
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant is in India, near coordinates 22.41979, 75.06896.
Satguru Jeerabad Cement Plant is operated by Sagar Cements (M) Pvt Ltd.