Skip to content
Government ACT

Heavy Construction Materials Critical to ACT Infrastructure and Urban Renewal

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia 2 mins read

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has today released The Economic Contribution of the Cement Concrete and Aggregates Industry in Australia, highlighting the important role the Australian Capital Territory’s heavy construction materials industry plays in supporting government-led infrastructure, housing and urban renewal.

The report shows that in FY24/25 the industry contributed $141.0 million to the ACT’s Gross State Product and supported 835 jobs across the Territory.

While smaller in scale than larger jurisdictions, the ACT’s cement, concrete and aggregates sector is strategically significant, underpinning major civic, transport, health and education infrastructure projects.

Demand in the Territory is shaped by continued urban infill, higher-density housing and public infrastructure investment, including light rail expansion and upgrades to health and education facilities.

CCAA CEO Michael Kilgariff said delivering the ACT’s infrastructure and housing program will depend on reliable and well-coordinated supply of heavy construction materials.

“If construction materials supply is disrupted, whether through global shocks, fuel constraints or planning bottlenecks, the impacts are clear: delayed projects, rising costs and increased pressure on housing affordability,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“Major transport, civic and residential developments across Canberra all rely on consistent supply of cement, concrete and aggregates.

“As a city-state with no local cement production, the ACT depends heavily on efficient cross-border supply chains. Freight reliability and coordinated planning are therefore critical to keeping projects on track.”

The report highlights the importance of safeguarding access to quarry resources in surrounding regions, maintaining efficient freight connections and supporting sustainable construction practices.

Mr Kilgariff said recognising heavy construction materials as essential enabling infrastructure will be central to meeting the Territory’s growth and sustainability objectives.

“These materials are fundamental to delivering Canberra’s housing, transport and public infrastructure commitments,” he said.

“When governments set ambitious urban renewal and infrastructure targets, they must also plan for the cement, concrete and aggregates that make those commitments achievable.”


About us:

About CCAA
CCAA is the voice of Australia’s heavy construction materials industry, an industry that contributes $20.7 billion to GDP and supports 112,970 jobs nationwide. CCAA members produce most of Australia's cement, concrete and aggregates, which are essential to the nation’s building and construction sectors.


Contact details:

Contact: Mitch Itter, Manager Communications | 0431 542 660 | [email protected]

More from this category

  • Government ACT, Political
  • 07/04/2026
  • 13:14
Massage & Myotherapy Australia

MMA proposes reforms to protect consumers, qualified massage therapists and sex workers

Key Facts: Anyone including sex workers can and do falsely advertise their services as massage therapy. Consequently, professional massage therapists and their employees are regularly subject to sexual harassment from clients demanding sexual services because of the confusion between the two very different professions No effective protections for professional massage therapists. Sexual harassment and abuse in a private massage room by a client is impossible to prove because it simply becomes one person’s word against the otherIn its submission to the ACT Sex Work Decriminalisation Consultation, Massage & Myotherapy Australia has warned that without clear and enforceable regulations, ambiguous shop…

  • Community, Government ACT
  • 25/03/2026
  • 10:59
Wednesday 25 March 2026

Canberra seminar to explore how human rights help fix critical social challenges

With so many issues currently impacting on the rights of people across Australia, an upcoming seminar in Canberra is set to unpack how we can fix wrongs with rights. With growing concerns around social cohesion, the right to peaceful protest, housing affordability, economic inequality, and the impact of climate change and digital technologies, The Answer Is Human Rights seminar will focus on how human rights can help us address these and other challenging issues. Presented by the Australian Human Rights Commission in partnership with the ACT Human Rights Commission, the seminar is part of the Commission’s national program to mark…

  • Government ACT, Political
  • 20/02/2026
  • 17:23
Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education

ACT continues to step ahead in promised alcohol delivery reforms

The ACT is one step closer to implementing life-saving updates to its alcohol delivery laws, as advocates urge the territory government to implement its Liquor Amendment Bill as soon as possible, following today’s report from the parliamentary committee looking at the Bill. “We welcome the Committee’s support of the Bill, and in particular its recommendation that the ACT Government amend the Bill to make harm minimisation the paramount object of the Liquor Act,” said Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education (FARE) CEO Ayla Chorley. “This would mean any government decisions relating to alcohol, such as approving liquor licences, must place…

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.