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    Legrand green steel cable management: embodied carbon cuts explained for project teams

    March 17, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Legrand green steel cable management: embodied carbon cuts explained for project teams

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    Legrand is now supplying cable management systems made with 34% green steel, targeting high‑demand data centre projects that can require hundreds or thousands of kilometres of cabling. The green steel uses at least 75% scrap in electric arc furnaces powered by certified renewable electricity, cutting embodied carbon from about 2.38t CO2e to as little as 799kg CO2e per tonne of finished cold‑rolled steel, a 70% reduction versus blast furnaces. This shift is already lowering Legrand’s Scope 3 supply‑chain emissions and offers contractors a straightforward route to reduce project embodied carbon.

    Technical Brief

    • Emissions for finished cold‑rolled green steel are reported as low as 799 kg CO2e per tonne.
    • Conventional blast furnace route cited at 2.38 t CO2e per tonne of comparable cold‑rolled steel.
    • Scope 3 reductions from green steel build on prior Scope 1 and 2 cuts at UK operations.
    • Additional decarbonisation measures include solar PV at Consett and Cramlington plus wider renewable electricity procurement.

    Our Take

    Using green steel with at least 75% scrap content at Consett and Cramlington positions Legrand ahead of many UK building-products suppliers in our coverage, where most low-embodied-carbon offerings still rely on incremental efficiency gains rather than wholesale feedstock changes.

    The drop from 2.38 t CO2e to as little as 799 kg CO2e per tonne of cold-rolled steel suggests that specifying Legrand UK & Ireland cable management could make a measurable difference to whole-of-building embodied carbon calculations on BREEAM- or LEED-driven projects.

    Being rated in the top 1% by EcoVadis gives Legrand a third‑party credential that procurement teams in UK and Irish infrastructure projects increasingly use as a pre-qualification filter, which may favour its systems over lower-cost but less transparently rated competitors.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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