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The potential is so large that more efforts are warranted

Heavy industry can up energy efficiency by a quarter

Heavy industries such as cement, chemicals or metals could step up energy efficiency by a quarter while cutting carbon dioxide emissions by up to a third, the International Energy Agency said on Monday.

They could be made more energy-efficient by upgrading the engines used in factories, including adjustable speed drives, steam systems and combined heat and power, and by recycling materials, the IEA--an adviser to 26 industrialized nations--said in a study.

It estimates there is potential for technical efficiency improvements of 18-26 percent for manufacturing industry worldwide and said energy savings could be larger if new technologies were taken into account.

"The potential is so large that more efforts are warranted, in order to achieve deep carbon dioxide emission reductions, reduce fossil fuel dependence and increase industrial competitiveness," IEA Chief Claude Mandil said.

Manufacturing industries use nearly a third of world energy production while releasing 36 percent of the global emissions of greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.

Chemicals, petrochemicals, iron and steel, cement, paper and pulp, along with other minerals and metals, account for more than two-thirds of this amount.

The most efficient industries are often in emerging economies where production is expanding, the IEA added.

"For example, the most efficient aluminum smelters are in Africa, and Brazil is among the most efficient cement producers," the IEA said, adding that some of the most efficient steel plants could be found in China.

China accounts for 80 percent of the growth in both industrial production and carbon dioxide emissions during the past 25 years.

A Dutch government-funded agency said last week that China had overtaken the United States as the top carbon dioxide emitter because of surging energy needs to fuel its economic development.

China points out that emissions measured per head of population are still far higher in the United States and other rich industrialized countries.

"The fact that China came out first is no surprise," Claude Mandil said. "But China per capita is still quite low compared with OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) countries and the United States."

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