Skip to content
Building Construction, Women

Percentage of women in steel continues to grow

Australian Steel Institute < 1 mins read

MEDIA RELEASE

07/03/2025

Percentage of women in steel continues to grow

The percentage of women in the local Australian steel industry continues to grow.

Across the local steel industry more generally, changes in parental leave, STEM and flexible work are encouraging more and more women into the industry.

An ASI poll of founding members shows a growth in the number of women working in steel products from 14% to 25% in the past 10 years, with further improvements likely due to a growing number of women coming through the tertiary engineering and trades education sectors.

Welcoming the change, chief executive of the ASI Mark Cain said the ASI was actively encouraging women into the industry through a range of initiatives including promotional activities through the ASI Diversity and Inclusiveness Committee (https://www.steel.org.au/what-we-do/committees-and-groups/diversity-and-inclusiveness-committee/ ), careers days and educational forums. 

With women making up more than 50% of ASI staff, Cain said the ASI is leading by example. 

“We are a proud supporter of inclusive work cultures where women’s careers thrive and their achievements are celebrated.” 

ASI is recognising the vital role women are playing in growing steel’s futures in a special media campaign and online feature to mark International Women’s Day on March 8, with the career paths of five women in steel explored. To see more go to https://www.steel.org.au/news-and-events/news/international-women-s-day-2025/

The Australian Steel Institute (ASI) is the peak body for the Australian steel industry, representing 500 companies and 5,000 members. Steel generates 100,000 jobs and $30b in annual revenue in Australia.

For more information on this press release, please contact ASI marketing and communications manager Steven Andrew on 0473 480 964 or stevena@steel.org.au.

 

 

More from this category

  • Building Construction, Employment Relations
  • 16/03/2025
  • 15:37
Australian Workers' Union

Heads must roll after mass silicosis diagnosis amongst M6 tunnel workers

Revelations in today’s The Sun Herald 13 tunnel workers in the still under construction M6 tunnel have been diagnosed with silicosis should prompt immediate prosecutions by SafeWork NSW to bring those responsible to justice, said the Australian Workers' Union. The workers are constructing the tunnels that will become stage 1 of the M6, the four kilometres of tunnels linking the M8 at Arncliffe to President Avenue, Rockdale. "The scale of this health disaster is staggering," said Chris Donovan, AWU Assistant National Secretary. “Thirteen workers on a single project were diagnosed with silicosis - an entirely preventable disease. “This isn't just…

  • Building Construction, Employment Relations
  • 16/03/2025
  • 15:25
Australian Workers' Union

Heads must roll after mass silicosis diagnosis amongst M6 tunnel workers

Revelations in today’s The Sun Herald 13 tunnel workers in the still under construction M6 tunnel have been diagnosed with silicosis should prompt immediate prosecutions by SafeWork NSW to bring those responsible to justice, said the Australian Workers' Union. The workers are constructing the tunnels that will become stage 1 of the M6, the four kilometres of tunnels linking the M8 at Arncliffe to President Avenue, Rockdale. "The scale of this health disaster is staggering," said Chris Donovan, AWU Assistant National Secretary. “Thirteen workers on a single project were diagnosed with silicosis - an entirely preventable disease. “This isn't just…

  • Building Construction
  • 14/03/2025
  • 16:30
Australian Constructors Association

Government response to Security of Payment review signals progress but more action is urgently required

The Australian Government’s response to the review of security of payment laws is a positive step toward a fairer and more sustainable construction industry but much more needs to be done and quickly. Welcoming the response, Australian Constructors Association (ACA) CEO Jon Davies said the report acknowledges the industry’s financial challenges and the need for action. “The government has recognised the points made in our ‘Trust Deficit’ paper that project bank accounts and trusts won’t solve the industry’s liquidity crisis—in fact, they could make it worse,” said Mr Davies. “The payment chain starts with clients, and the government is the…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.