Carbon capture and utilization (CCU) in smelting involves capturing carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions from smelting processes and converting them into valuable products, reducing environmental impact and enhancing sustainability in metal production (Mining Technology, 2024). Smelting, a high-energy process to extract metals from ores, generates significant CO₂, making CCU a critical innovation.
CCU begins with capturing CO₂ from smelter exhaust gases using technologies like amine-based scrubbers or membrane separation. These systems trap CO₂ before it’s released into the atmosphere (ScienceDirect, 2024). For example, BHP’s trials with amine capture at its smelters have achieved up to 90% CO₂ capture efficiency (BHP, 2023). The captured CO₂ is then purified and stored temporarily or transported for utilization.
Utilization transforms CO₂ into products like synthetic fuels, chemicals, or construction materials. In smelting, CO₂ can be converted into carbon monoxide for use as a reducing agent in metal processing, lowering reliance on fossil fuels (E & MJ, 2023). Alternatively, CO₂ is mineralized into stable carbonates for cement production, sequestering carbon permanently (Mining Technology, 2024). Rio Tinto’s CCU pilot converts CO₂ into methanol, creating a revenue stream (Rio Tinto, 2023).
CCU reduces emissions, aligning with net-zero goals, and can cut smelting’s carbon footprint by 20-30% (ScienceDirect, 2024). It also improves resource efficiency and creates economic opportunities through byproducts (E & MJ, 2023). However, high costs and energy demands for capture and conversion pose challenges (Gartner, 2022). CCU is shaping a greener smelting future.
What valuable products do you think carbon dioxide from smelters could be turned into, and how might that benefit the environment and economy? Share your thoughts!


