About the team


Peak Cluster was formed by four cement and lime producers. They are working together with partners and investors to make Peak Cluster happen.

Tarmac, a subsidiary of global building materials giant CRH plc, owns Tunstead Cement Plant – one of Europe’s largest limestone quarries – and is both a partner and investor in Peak Cluster, leveraging its infrastructure to cut CO2 emissions.

Holcim’s Cauldon Cement Plant in Staffordshire, a cornerstone of British cement production and industrial heritage, is a key partner in Peak Cluster, investing in and utilising its infrastructure to drive down CO2 emissions.

Breedon’s Hope Cement Works – the UK’s largest cement plant and a pillar of British cement production for over 90 years – is a committed investor in Peak Cluster and will use its infrastructure to significantly reduce CO2 emissions.

Buxton Lime’s Tunstead facility – one of the UK’s leading producers of lime for industrial, environmental, and water treatment applications – is both an investor in Peak Cluster and planning to use its infrastructure to reduce CO2 emissions.

The National Wealth Fund is a government-backed initiative aimed at accelerating investment in low carbon projects. The NWF has invested £28.6 million in Peak Cluster to support its carbon capture infrastructure development.

Spirit Energy are repurposing the depleted Morecambe gas fields into one of the UK’s largest carbon storage facilities in which CO2, captured by Peak Cluster, will be stored.

Summit Energy Evolution Ltd (SEEL) is a UK-based subsidiary of Sumitomo Corporation focused on investing into low-carbon energy projects, including Peak Cluster.

Progressive Energy leads the development of large-scale, low-carbon energy projects and continues to drive the Peak Cluster initiative as its originator and investor.

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