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Helping bricks go green in Uganda
DW (English)
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5/21/2024
Bricks used in construction have a huge climate footprint. Engineers in Uganda are seeking to change that. It’s an urgent task in a country with a booming population and construction industry.
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00:00
These bricks are dry-pressed and not fired in a kiln.
00:05
They are made of sand and a bit of cement and a lot of muscle power.
00:10
And no wood since there is no kiln.
00:12
Ugandan architect Stephen Juko believes a switch to alternative construction materials
00:18
is long overdue.
00:20
When you drive through many forests, they are no longer forests, you don't feel that
00:24
darkness surrounding you.
00:26
So the problem is dire that we need to stop firing bricks to make our houses.
00:33
About a quarter of each brick is made out of cement though, and cement manufacturing
00:38
produces a lot of CO2.
00:40
But the interlocking bricks are easy to assemble, so they need less cement than regular ones
00:46
do.
00:49
The block that comes out is the interlocking.
00:52
Interlocks at the top, at the sides and the bottom.
00:55
So by that way as well we reduce the amount of cement used to build a structure.
01:00
In that way we are reducing the emissions by reducing the cement and the amount of trees
01:07
that or vegetation that would have been cut down to, in order to produce a brick or to
01:14
build a house.
01:16
In Uganda, most houses are still made out of kiln-fired bricks, which mostly use firewood.
01:23
There are thousands of small brick-making businesses like this throughout the country.
01:29
And the ongoing housing shortage means their bricks are in high demand.
01:34
Using pressed bricks instead could help save a lot of firewood.
01:38
The homes still look the same, and for the homeowners, they also offer other benefits.
01:45
Constructing with interlocking bricks enabled us to have our building in less than two months.
01:54
It fit in our budget and then we also saved because the money that we would have used
02:02
to transport materials.
02:06
The construction industry is a major climate killer.
02:10
Cement manufacturing accounts for some 8% of global carbon emissions.
02:18
That's why engineers are studying ways to reduce or eliminate cement in brick-making,
02:23
including Marion Nwahereza.
02:26
She works for Eco-Concrete, a company that makes cement using of volcanic ash.
02:32
Traditional cement is made out of limestone and firing it emits massive amounts of CO2.
02:38
When you heat one kilogram of limestone, you emit about 44% of it as carbon dioxide.
02:47
You only retain 55.
02:49
So for one ton, when you put in all other production emissions, you find that for one
02:54
ton, you're emitting about 500 kilograms of carbon dioxide.
02:58
That is about half of it.
03:01
The engineer has been working with students at Makarera University in Kampala on the new
03:06
process.
03:07
Volcanic ash is plentiful in Uganda.
03:10
Just like in ordinary cement, the recipe calls for sodium hydroxide.
03:14
But the mixture doesn't need to be heated, so the process uses five times less energy
03:19
than limestone-based cement.
03:22
The result is what's called geopolymer cement.
03:25
Their tests have shown that this product could cut emissions by 80% compared to Portland
03:31
cement, which is used around the world.
03:36
We've been using it in blocks, building blocks.
03:39
And we've also done water absorption tests, and these materials are proven to be better
03:44
than Portland cement.
03:46
The engineer and the architect share a common goal - to help make Uganda's construction
03:51
industry more sustainable.
03:55
The majority of people can do our work, what they eat, how they get to work.
03:59
But with engineers it's different.
04:00
They actually have the space to innovate and reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
04:07
As someone who studied in the building profession, architecture, and then with my colleagues
04:13
in engineering, we're responsible for many of the designs.
04:17
So the process starts with us.
04:19
The recommendations we make, or the specifications we give to our clients.
04:25
While Stephen Juko has been using his bricks for several years, Marion Nwa-Hereza is starting
04:31
pilot production, and hopes she'll soon get the green light from local authorities.
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