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Government NSW, Oil Mining Resources

Planning Reform Must Protect Heavy Construction Materials Supply Chain

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia 2 mins read
Key Facts:
  • CCAA urges NSW Government to protect industrial lands to maintain efficient construction materials supply chain for housing and infrastructure projects
  • Limited industrial land in Greater Sydney faces increasing pressure, with proximity to growth areas being crucial for concrete supply efficiency
  • Organisation calls for formal recognition of heavy construction materials supply chain in State Land Use Plan and designation of strategic industrial precincts
  • CCAA advocates for development of NSW Heavy Construction Materials Plan to improve government coordination and protect extractive resources
  • Planning certainty and protection of industrial land deemed essential for housing affordability, infrastructure delivery and economic growth

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has called on the NSW Government to ensure industrial lands reform strengthens the heavy construction materials supply chain required to deliver the State’s housing and infrastructure pipeline, in its submission to the New Approach to Strategic Planning Discussion Paper.

CCAA CEO Michael Kilgariff said planning reform presents an important opportunity to better align housing targets with the materials needed to build them.

“Housing delivery and materials supply must go hand in hand,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“Cement, concrete and aggregates are the building blocks of homes, roads and renewable energy infrastructure. Planning settings must support their efficient production and distribution.”

Mr Kilgariff said industrial land in Greater Sydney is limited and under increasing pressure, while the construction materials supply chain depends on proximity to growth areas, freight corridors and ports.

“Concrete supply depends on being close to where it is used,” he said.

“When operations are pushed further from growth areas, it directly affects cost, emissions and delivery timelines.”

CCAA has recommended the State Land Use Plan formally recognise the heavy construction materials supply chain, designate strategically located industrial precincts as state-significant, and ensure planning frameworks support efficient operations, including appropriate operating settings for key facilities.

CCAA has consistently advocated for the development of a NSW Heavy Construction Materials Plan to provide greater coordination across government, streamline approvals and protect strategic extractive resources from encroachment over the long term.

“Industry has the capability and capacity to invest as demand grows,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“What we need is planning certainty that protects critical industrial land and enables the supply chain to operate efficiently.”

“Getting industrial lands policy right is fundamental to housing affordability, infrastructure delivery and economic growth.”

CCAA said it looks forward to working constructively with the NSW Government as planning reforms progress.

“We welcome the opportunity to contribute to a framework that supports both housing delivery and the materials that make it possible,” Mr Kilgariff said.


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:

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

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