Fueling Sustainability: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of RDF and Sewage Sludge as Alternative Fuels in Cement Production
Downloads
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58414/SCIENTIFICTEMPER.2025.16.9.13Keywords:
Sewage Sludge, Refuse Derived Fuel, Municipal Solid Waste, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Cement production, Alternative fuelDimensions Badge
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 The Scientific Temper

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
With a substantial market share in the global cement industry, India ranks as the second-largest producer of cement. Cement is made by extracting and processing raw materials like shale, clay, and limestone, which are then heated to high temperatures in a kiln to create clinker. With the cement industry responsible for about 8% of all anthropogenic CO2 emissions, it is one of the largest contributors to global greenhouse gas emissions. Fuels are essential to the production of cement because they supply the heat required to burn the kilns, which turns raw materials into clinker, the main component of cement. Fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas have been used traditionally, but to lower energy costs and their negative effects on the environment, there is a growing trend toward alternative fuels, such as waste materials. Cement producers in many nations are already fuel switching from coal to alternative fuels. The cement industry combines material recycling and energy recovery to use waste as alternative fuels. Using Cost-Benefit Analysis, this study examines the use of Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) from Municipal Solid Waste and treated Sewage Sludge (SS) as an alternative fuel for coal in cement production. Although both RDF and SS are more cost-effective and environmentally friendly alternatives to coal, this study emphasizes that RDF is a more sustainable option.Abstract
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- Kowsalya Ramasamy, Thiyagarajan Krishnan, Performance analysis of RF substrate materials in ISM band antenna applications , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 14 No. 02 (2023): The Scientific Temper
- Rajeshwar Mukherjee, Uday S. Dixit, Understanding cosmopsychism based on stochastic electrodynamics from the perspective of the Indian knowledge system , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 14 No. 03 (2023): The Scientific Temper
- V. Manikandabalaji, R. Sivakumar, V. Maniraj, A framework for diabetes diagnosis based on type-2 fuzzy semantic ontology approach , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 03 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Jayalakshmi K., M. Prabakaran, The role of big data in transforming human resource analytics: A literature review , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. spl-1 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Theophilus Deenadayal, Tarun Jain, Floristic composition in Paramananda Devara Gudda A sacred grove at Lingadahalli Village Devadurga Taluk Raichur District Karnataka, India , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 04 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- P S Renjeni, B Senthilkumaran, Ramalingam Sugumar, L. Jaya Singh Dhas, Gaussian kernelized transformer learning model for brain tumor risk factor identification and disease diagnosis , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 02 (2025): The Scientific Temper
- S. Mohamed Iliyas, M. Mohamed Surputheen, A.R. Mohamed Shanavas, Trust-based symmetric game theory for physical layer security in wi-fi communication , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 05 (2025): The Scientific Temper
- Sanjeev Kumar, Saurabh Charaya, Rachna Mehta, Multi-Metric Evaluation Framework for Machine Learning-Based Load Prediction in e-Governance Systems , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 17 No. 01 (2026): The Scientific Temper
- Tara K. Sharma, Problems and prospects of tourism financing in Sikkim , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 14 No. 04 (2023): The Scientific Temper
- Naveena Somasundaram, Vigneshkumar M, Sanjay R. Pawar, M. Amutha, Balu S, Priya V, AI-driven material design for tissue engineering a comprehensive approach integrating generative adversarial networks and high-throughput experimentation , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 01 (2024): The Scientific Temper
<< < 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Nalini. S, Ritha. W, Sasitharan Nagapan, Economic Order Quantity under Perishability: Analytical and Iterative Approaches to Cost Minimization , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 09 (2025): The Scientific Temper
- Nalini. S, Ritha. W, Sasitharan Nagapan, Optimal Inventory Policies for Perishable Products Under Demand and Lead Time Uncertainty , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 09 (2025): The Scientific Temper

