Skip to content
Oil Mining Resources

CCAA to Enter 2026 With Strong Momentum and Steady Leadership

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia 2 mins read

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has reaffirmed strong and stable leadership at its 2025 Annual General Meeting, following a year in which the association significantly strengthened its national influence and sharpened its policy impact as the authoritative voice of Australia’s heavy construction materials sector.

George Agriogiannis (CEO, Holcim Australia) continues as Chair of CCAA, supported by newly elected Deputy Chair Paul Headd (CEO, Adbri). The AGM also acknowledged the contribution of Mario Panuccio, whose term concluded at the meeting. CCAA is pleased to welcome a new Director to the Council with Dr Diego Martinez Velandia - CEO & Managing Director, Master Builders Solutions Group ANZ appointed.

Throughout 2025, CCAA delivered one of its most active advocacy and policy programs to date. The association advanced national work on sustainable procurement, standards modernisation, respirable crystalline silica safety, resource access, logistics and decarbonisation, ensuring industry priorities were clearly understood by governments and regulators. This coordinated national approach has reinforced CCAA’s role as a trusted, solutions-focused leader for a sector that underpins Australia’s productivity and long-term economic growth.

This momentum is underpinned by CCAA’s 2025-27 Strategic Plan, which continues to guide the association’s national advocacy and industry leadership across its key priority areas.

CCAA Chief Executive Michael Kilgariff said the association’s strong performance reflects both its stable leadership and the fundamental importance of the sector it represents.

“The heavy construction materials industry is essential to Australia’s economic future. Every major transport project, housing initiative, renewable energy asset and piece of social infrastructure relies on the materials the sector provides,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“CCAA’s job is to ensure the policy environment recognises that importance. In 2025 we delivered nationally consistent, evidence-based advocacy at a time when governments were reshaping major regulatory and planning frameworks.”

Mr Kilgariff said CCAA enters 2026 with strong momentum and a clear focus on securing practical outcomes from the Federal Government’s Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act reforms and progress on key policy priorities such as the development of Heavy Construction Materials Plans across key jurisdictions.

 “Functional EPBC reforms and long-term resource planning will be central to maintaining the secure, proximate access to materials that Australia’s infrastructure pipeline requires,” he said.

“CCAA will continue to work closely with governments to deliver balanced, workable and nationally consistent outcomes.”

Mr Kilgariff said CCAA’s strengthened capability and clear direction mean the association is well placed to deliver another year of high-impact national leadership.

“The sector we represent is foundational to Australia’s prosperity. With stable governance, strong member engagement and a clear strategic agenda, CCAA is ready to continue elevating the industry’s voice and delivering practical, meaningful outcomes for 2026 and beyond,” he said.

The 2025 CCAA Annual Review can be viewed online here.


About us:

About CCAA
CCAA is the voice of Australia’s heavy construction materials industry, an industry that generates over $15 billion annually and directly employs 30,000 Australians, with a further 80,000 employed indirectly. CCAA members produce most of Australia's cement, concrete, and aggregates, which are essential to the nation’s building and construction sectors.


Contact details:

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

Media

More from this category

  • Business Company News, Oil Mining Resources
  • 05/12/2025
  • 10:50
Jane Morgan Management

Pinnacle Minerals (ASX:PIM) Starts First Modern Exploration at Antimony Queen Project in Washington State, USA

5 December 2025 – Perth, Australia | Pinnacle Minerals Ltd (ASX:PIM) has commenced its first systematic modern exploration program for the Antimony Queen Project in Washington State in the United States, targeting historic antimony-gold underground workings in the Gold Creek District. Activities in the field are now underway across the area, which includes multiple historic adits and more than 1,000 feet of underground development. This provides a brownfields platform where proven structures and mineralisation can be rapidly followed by modern exploration techniques. The Antimony Queen Project claims cover approximately 500 hectares (~5km²) within a historically productive antimony-gold district that includes…

  • Contains:
  • Government SA, Oil Mining Resources
  • 05/12/2025
  • 05:48
Cement Concrete and Aggregates Australia

CCAA Releases 2026 South Australian Election Policy Priorities

Key Facts: CCAA releases Policy Priorities for South Australia 2026, identifying six key reform areas to secure construction materials supply and meet infrastructure needsThe policy outlines reforms including supply planning, regulatory streamlining, sustainable procurement, circular economy advancement, logistics modernisation and workforce developmentGrowing construction activity, including major projects like Torrens to Darlington and the Women's and Children's Hospital, is driving unprecedented demand for materialsHeavy construction materials comprise nearly 30% of total project costs, with supply chain constraints directly impacting housing affordability and infrastructure costsThe policy document has been distributed to SA political parties for feedback ahead of the 2026 SA ElectionCement…

  • Legal, Oil Mining Resources
  • 04/12/2025
  • 15:42
Denman, Aberdeen, Muswellbrook, and Scone Healthy Environment Group

Community group looks forward to High Court hearing to test historic Mt Pleasant coal mine climate ruling

A Hunter Valley community group says it looks forward to defending its historic climate victory after the High Court agreed to hear MACH Energy’s challenge against an earlier Appeals Court ruling that squashed the Planning Department’s approval of the Mt Pleasant coal mine expansion. This is the first time that the High Court of Australia will consider the issue of climate change. The High Courtagreed to hear the challenge earlier today. MACH Energy brought the challenge in response to the Court of Appeal’s finding in July that NSW Planning authorities should have considered the climate harm a new coal mine…

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.