The American Concrete Institute, through the work of ACI Committee 323, has released ACI CODE-323: Low-Carbon Concrete — Code Requirements and Commentary. The code provides provisions for concrete where reduced global warming potential is required. The code was developed by a consensus process and provides commentary, along with references for the user desiring to study individual questions in greater detail.
The code may be adopted as a standalone code or can be used in combination with a structural design code or low-carbon material code adopted by an authority having jurisdiction. The code is in a format that allows reference to a set of chapters, based on the structure type. Adoption would include all of chapters 1 to 4 and the applicable chapter(s) of 5, 6, 7 and/or 8, plus Appendix A. The code is written in a format that allows reference without change to its language. Therefore, background details or suggestions for carrying out the requirements or intent of the code provisions cannot be included with the code itself. The commentary is provided for this purpose.
The code employs a carbon budget approach and emphasizes the use of Environmental Product Declarations for benchmarking, aiming to standardize methodologies for reducing carbon emissions associated with concrete construction.
“In the past, standards for lowering carbon in the built environment have been difficult to define, and this code represents a giant leap forward,” said Matthew Adams, chair of ACI Committee 323. “The code provides references for various structures so that the guidelines can be applied to any project. Committee 323 members did a great deal of work to produce this code, and it is just a beginning, as future versions will provide even more guidance to everyone designing and building with reduced-carbon concrete.”
ACI Committee 323’s mission is to develop and maintain code requirements for low-carbon concrete. An on-demand course, “ACI CODE-323: Low-Carbon Concrete Code,” is also available from ACI and explains the development and purpose of the code.
To learn more about ACI and get involved, visit concrete.org.