KEY POINTS
  • Cement is necessary for making concrete, which is foundational in constructing buildings and infrastructure around the globe because it is relatively low-cost, strong and durable. But making cement generates about 8% of global carbon dioxide emissions, a leading cause of global warming.
  • Leah Ellis, a 33-year-old chemist and first-time CEO, and Yet-Ming Chiang, an MIT professor who is on his sixth clean-tech startup, have teamed up to launch Sublime Systems, a company developing a clean cement-making process.
  • Ellis describes their solution as the "electric vehicle of cement making": They're replacing the fossil fuel-intensive conventional process with an electrochemical solution.
Leah Ellis and Yet-Ming Chiang

While Leah Ellis was earning her doctorate at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia, she was part of a team that did battery research for Tesla. After she graduated, her budding career took an unusual turn.

"I could have gotten an easier job with my background in battery materials — a lot of my colleagues go work for Tesla or Apple. I could have done that, ... and I would have made more money at first," Ellis, 33, told CNBC by phone Wednesday.