Industrial facility processing sewage sludge ash

Carbon compliance is costing cement manufacturers millions.

RECEM is developing a certified cement additive from sewage sludge ash, helping manufacturers reduce emissions and cut carbon costs.


The cement industry is under pressure from every direction.

Three structural pressures are reshaping the economics of cement production in Europe.

CO₂ compliance is becoming a real cost

Free carbon allowances are being phased out. From 2026 to 2034, cement manufacturers will face the full EU ETS carbon price on every tonne they produce. At current prices, that means millions in additional costs per plant per year.

Cement is one of the largest sources of industrial CO₂

Cement production accounts for around 8% of global CO₂ emissions. A large share of those emissions are released chemically when limestone is heated to produce clinker, making cement one of the hardest industries to decarbonise.

EU wastewater regulation is creating a new material stream

The EU Sewage Sludge Directive mandates phosphorus recovery from wastewater treatment. The byproduct of that process is sewage sludge ash, a material currently without a clear industrial destination.


Sewage Sludge Ash → Certified SCM

A supplementary cementitious material (SCM) partially replaces clinker, the most carbon-intensive step in cement production. RECEM develops a process to convert phosphorus-depleted sewage sludge ash into exactly that: a certified SCM that meets European standards and can be adopted directly by cement manufacturers.

The result is circular: wastewater utilities get a compliant disposal pathway, cement producers get a verifiable CO₂ reduction tool, and a significant waste stream gets a productive end use.

Up to 40%

Clinker replacement potential with certified SCMs in standard Portland cement

~200 kg CO₂/t

CO₂ emissions avoided per tonne of clinker displaced by a certified SCM

200,000 t/yr

Sewage sludge ash generated in Austria alone, a feedstock with no current end market


Why Now?

Regulatory deadlines and rising carbon costs are creating a narrow window. The time for a new certified entrant is now, not in five years.

EU ETS: Full Carbon Costs from 2026

Free allowances for cement producers are being phased out. Every tonne of clinker replaced by a certified SCM reduces direct carbon cost exposure. For the first time, the financial case for clinker substitution is structural, not voluntary.

Sewage Sludge Directive: 2027 Deadline

Mandatory phosphorus recovery from sewage sludge will generate a growing and predictable stream of sewage sludge ash across the EU. Wastewater utilities are actively looking for compliant disposal pathways for this material.


Building RECEM

We are a team based in Graz, Austria building RECEM from the ground up. We are looking for a co-founder with expertise in materials science or chemistry to build the technical foundation with us.
  • Eva-Maria Schneider

    Eva-Maria Schneider

    Sustainability & Strategy

  • Thomas Eder

    Thomas Eder

    Design & Business Development

  • Jasmin Grill

    Jasmin Grill

    Marketing & Growth

  • Valerie Dokonal

    Valerie Dokonal

    Operations & Business Development

  • +Open Role

    Technical Co-Founder

    Materials Science · Cement Chemistry · Open Position


Looking for a Materials Scientist or Chemist to Build This with Us

We are building RECEM from the ground up and we are looking for someone who wants to be part of it from the very beginning.

We are looking for a technical co-founder with a background in materials science, geopolymer chemistry, or cement engineering: someone who wants to lead R&D and build a category-defining company from the ground up. Real equity, real ownership, and a problem worth solving.

If you have worked on supplementary cementitious materials, calcium silicate hydrates, or industrial waste valorisation, or simply believe this problem deserves to be solved, we want to hear from you.

Reach Out →

Let's talk.

Co-founder conversation, incubator intro, or just curious. We're open.