Skip to content
Government Federal, Oil Mining Resources

Productivity Commission report reinforces case for meaningful circular construction reform

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia 2 mins read
Key Facts:
  • CCAA endorses Productivity Commission's final report on circular economy, supporting removal of regulatory barriers for recycled materials in construction
  • Report calls for shift from prescriptive standards to performance-based regulations and national harmonisation of state-based specifications
  • National stocktake of infrastructure standards recommended, particularly focusing on cement and concrete standards
  • Current Australian Cement Standard AS 3972-2010 needs updating to accommodate modern materials and emissions reduction whilst maintaining safety
  • Industry supports cross-jurisdictional coordination to enable circular construction and infrastructure delivery whilst transitioning to net zero

Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has welcomed the Productivity Commission’s final report into Australia’s circular economy: unlocking the opportunities, saying it reinforces long-standing industry calls to remove unnecessary regulatory barriers and modernise standards to enable greater use of recycled and low-carbon materials in construction.

The report highlights the need to move away from overly prescriptive standards and inconsistent state-based specifications that restrict the use of recycled and alternative materials in infrastructure and building projects, an issue consistently raised by CCAA in its submission to the inquiry and its interim report submission.

CCAA welcomed the Commission’s call for a national stocktake of infrastructure standards and specifications, including specific consideration of standards governing cement and concrete.

CCAA Chief Executive Officer Michael Kilgariff said the report provides a clear, evidence-based pathway to lift materials productivity while supporting economic growth, decarbonisation and infrastructure delivery.

“The Productivity Commission has recognised what our industry has consistently been saying for years. Australia can only unlock the benefits of a circular economy when outdated and inconsistent regulations are modernised to encourage innovation,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“Our members are already applying circular economy principles at scale through established material reuse, recycling and emissions reduction practices.

“What is now required is a regulatory and standards environment that supports the safe, effective use of these materials in construction and infrastructure.

“The report’s discussion of Australian Cement Standard AS 3972-2010 highlights the need to ensure standards keep pace with modern materials, technologies and emissions reduction opportunities, while maintaining safety and performance.

“Moving away from overly prescriptive requirements and toward performance-based standards is critical to enabling the safe, durable and large scale use of recycled and lower-carbon materials.

“With significant public infrastructure investment ahead, even modest reforms to standards and procurement can deliver real productivity, cost and emissions benefits.”

CCAA also welcomed the report’s emphasis on regulatory harmonisation across jurisdictions.

“Different rules in different states does not deliver better outcomes, it simply increases cost and delays for projects and businesses operating nationally,” Mr Kilgariff said.

“A coordinated, cross-jurisdictional approach is essential if Australia is serious about scaling up circular construction.”

“Our industry supports circularity that is evidence-based, with the focus firmly on performance, safety and outcomes.”

CCAA looks forward to working with governments, standards bodies and infrastructure agencies to implement the report’s recommendations and support resilient infrastructure delivery and the transition to net zero.


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]

More from this category

  • Business Company News, Oil Mining Resources
  • 16/01/2026
  • 09:44
Jane Morgan Management

Austral acquires Lady Loretta mine to significantly expand copper growth pipelin

Austral Resources Australia Ltd (ASX:AR1) has entered into an agreement with Glencore AG to acquire the Lady Loretta mining leases, associated exploration permits and site infrastructure, a strategic transaction that materially strengthens Austral’s copper growth pipeline and balance sheet. The acquisition consolidates Austral’s tenure immediately adjacent to its Lady Annie Copper Mine in North West Queensland, unlocking near-term and longer-term opportunities to add copper feedstock to the Company’s Mt Kelly processing plant. Under the transaction, Austral will acquire 100% of Noranda Pacific Pty Ltd, owner and operator of the Lady Loretta mine. At completion, Glencore will pay Austral US$40.0 million…

  • Contains:
  • Disability, Government Federal
  • 16/01/2026
  • 06:06
Australian Services Union

Time to take profit out of NDIS, union urges

The Australian Services Union has warned that for-profit providers are jeopardising the viability and integrity of the NDIS, and is urging the federal government to consider banning profiteering companies from the scheme. The call comes after the ABC’s 7.30 program last night aired a story about hundreds of disability support workers being shortchanged their hard-earned pay, superannuation and other entitlements by a complex group of for-profit providers in the NDIS. Over the last 18 months in NSW alone, the ASU has investigated 102 providers for underpaying workers and breaching the Fair Work Act, and all of these, bar two, have…

  • Disability, Government Federal
  • 16/01/2026
  • 06:00
Australian Services Union

Time to take profit out of NDIS, union urges

The Australian Services Union has warned that for-profit providers are jeopardising the viability and integrity of the NDIS, and is urging the federal government to consider banning profiteering companies from the scheme. The call comes after the ABC’s 7.30 program last night aired a story about hundreds of disability support workers being shortchanged their hard-earned pay, superannuation and other entitlements by a complex group of for-profit providers in the NDIS. Over the last 18 months in NSW alone, the ASU has investigated 102 providers for underpaying workers and breaching the Fair Work Act, and all of these, bar two, have…

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.