Shownotes
Grant Quasha is betting big on green cement. "People don't realize how big the cement and concrete businesses are. [...] It's the number one commodity in the world other than water."
The chairman and CEO of Eco Material Technologies views the $350+ billion cement industry as a giant potential market for sustainable construction. After years of investment banking in commodities and materials, Grant moved from investing in other businesses to building his own, with major impact.
Listen as Grant Quasha shares loads of insight from selling sustainability plans to envisioning the massive role the materials sector could play in building a decarbonized future.
Episode timestamps:
- 00:00 - 00:56 Grant Quasha on the twofold potential of sustainable concrete.
- 00:57 - 02:39 Conor Gaughan introduces Grant Quasha of Eco Material Technologies.
- 02:40 - 06:18 Early career, materials and commodities, and the learning curve.
- 06:19 - 13:30 Business school, international shipping, and building businesses.
- 13:31 - 19:14 Green cement in Texas and concrete vs cement.
- 19:15 - 26:16 How Eco Material Technologies creates impact.
- 26:17 - 33:14 Capturing lightning in a bottle, potential growth, and pitching investors.
- 33:15 - 39:33 Capital markets and aligning doing good with doing well.
- 39:34 - 44:46 Public policy, climate legislation, and institutional support.
- 44:47 - 49:10 Upcoming innovations, leaving a legacy, and setting priorities.
- 49:11 - 50:57 How to learn more and closing credits.
If you liked this episode, listen next to Chris Anderson of Vantem Global on Building Sustainable, Affordable Energy Efficient Homes At Scale.
More on Grant Quasha and Eco Material Technologies:
Connect with Conor Gaughan on linkedin.com/in/ckgone and instagram.com/ckgone
Have questions, feedback, or a great idea for a potential guest? Email us at CiC@consensus-digital.com
If you enjoyed the show, please leave a review – it really helps us out!
Consensus in Conversation is a podcast by Consensus Digital Media produced in association with Reasonable Volume.