SSAB and Heidelberg Materials join forces to develop EAF slag into a binding agent

The joint project aims to develop EAF slag into an efficient and more sustainable alternative binder in cement, to reduce the climate footprint of the construction sector

SSAB and Heidelberg Materials are entering a collaboration to develop electric arc furnace slag (EAF slag) into an alternative binder in cement.

The project aims to develop EAF slag into an efficient and more sustainable alternative binder in cement, known as a supplementary cementitious material (SCM), to reduce the climate footprint of the construction sector. The project has been granted funding of over SEK 20 million through The Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth from the Just Transition Fund with national co‑financing.

“This is a natural next step in our shared journey toward creating valuable solutions for our by-products. We are transitioning to electric arc furnaces in Oxelösund with start of production planned for early 2027, in Luleå in 2029, and thereafter in Raahe, Finland. SSAB’s goal is production in line with sustainable development and circular economy. This also includes our side streams. Our ambition is to develop applications for the slag that will be generated in electric arc furnaces in the near future. Through this project, we are seizing these opportunities by combining strong expertise and long experience with a shared determination to drive change,” said Marko Mäkikyrö, director of by-product sales and development at SSAB.

The new four-year research project builds on knowledge from previous successful research and collaboration initiatives. By bringing together leading expertise from Luleå University of Technology, the University of Oulu, and Swerim, along with industry partners SSAB and Heidelberg Materials, the project forms a strong consortium with competence and capacity. This provides the best possible conditions to take the next step in development and meet future challenges.

The focus is on developing methods to optimise the slag, from lab to pilot scale, and on evaluating performance in cement and concrete applications. The goal is to create an industrially scalable solution that can be applied to future products.

Heidelberg Materials and SSAB have a long-standing collaboration on raw materials by using parts of SSAB’s slag as input in cement production at the Slite cement plant in Sweden. This new project is an important part of a partnership as SSAB transitions its production to electric arc furnaces.

“We see a good opportunity in including EAF slag from SSAB as part of our strategy to reduce the carbon footprint of our products. Through this collaboration, we unite leading expertise from industry and research with a common ambition to deliver the building materials of the future” said Magnus Ohlsson, CEO at Heidelberg Materials Cement Sverige.

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