Skip to main content

Puma’s bio-based CarbonBind an AFPA winner

For its bio-based asphalt and sprayed seal binder, Puma Energy recently picked up the ‘National Innovation Award’ from the Australian Flexible Pavement Association – AFPA.
By David Arminas November 22, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Puma Energy’s binder trials in Queensland, Australia (image courtesy Puma Energy)

The CarbonBind Project, from Puma Energy Bitumen, has won the Australian Flexible Pavement Association’s (AFPA) National Innovation Award.

Earlier this year, CarbonBind – a bio-based asphalt and sprayed seal binder – also won AFPA’s regional awards in Australia’s Victoria and New South Wales states.

Puma, based in Switzerland, said CarbonBind is a blend of bitumen with a sustainably-grown plant-based component that maintains at least equal quality and technical performance with normal asphalt. The company said it is an alternative to conventional products and “significantly reduces the overall carbon footprint of bitumen and the asphalt products that contain it”.

CarbonBind captures carbon from the atmosphere and stores it permanently in a road’s pavement. There are different grades available, but in atypical application, for every tonne of CarbonBind used 150kg of CO2 is sequestered into the road or pavement forever.

Puma says that the carbon footprint reductions were externally verified by means of a robust life-cycle assessment and documented in environmental product declarations. The biogenic material is sustainably source, in a process certified under the International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC) system.

"[The award] recognises our commitment to create a sustainable future for the bitumen and asphalt industry through rigorous R&D,” said Phil Chirnside, Puma Energy General Manager Australia. “We are committed to reducing the carbon intensity of our bitumen products, developing novel and sustainable bitumen products with low-temperature asphalt additives and bio-based alternatives to fossil-derived bitumen. CarbonBind is probably the most exciting bridge between legacy technology and the low carbon, high-performing binders of the future."

CarbonBind is one of a range of Puma Energy Bitumen products available to help customers reduce their carbon footprint. The range also includes Olexocrumb; waste tyres are used to create crumbed rubber-modified bitumen. The process not only reduces harmful tyre waste but also provides bitumen that is longer lasting and better for roads.

In 2022, Puma Energy Bitumen invested in production facilities to help meet rising demand for waste rubber modified binders and other speciality products.

Puma Energy – a mid- and downstream oil company - is incorporated in Singapore and has corporate headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. The business is 96% majority-owned by Singapore-based French company Trafigura and has around 3,500 employees worldwide working in all its divisions including fuels, aviation fuels, lubricants and what the company calls future energies, not only bitumen. Its operations span 40 countries across five continents and encompass the supply, storage, refining, distribution and retail of a range of petroleum products.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asphalt plant innovations from key firms
    June 12, 2017
    Asphalt plant builders continue to develop new technologies to meet different demands from clients. Marini says that in addition to developing new and more sophisticated asphalt plants, the firm is also meeting demands from customers looking to upgrade existing asphalt plants with the addition of new systems. These can be used to boost output and material quality, while also delivering new grades of mixes. At the same time, plant upgrades can reduce the environmental profile of a plant, while improving its
  • The elixir ReLIXIR from Sripath Technologies
    February 22, 2022
    ReLIXIR rejuvenator is a low-viscosity, free-flowing blend of bio-based oils that can easily be pumped from tote or bulk tank into the bitumen tank, injected into the bitumen feed line to a drum or batch plant or directly onto RAP particles on a conveyor.
  • Recycling glass for use in asphalt
    November 4, 2019
    A novel operation in Australia is using recycled glass as a material for asphalt production.
  • Sripath’s ‘growing’ rejuvenator market
    October 12, 2021
    The Illinois Tollway, the agency which maintains and operates toll roads in the state of Illinois, is currently trialling rejuvenators in a bid to increase the percentage of RAP that can be used in its roads while maintaining their performance