Today marks the 10th anniversary of the World Cement Association (WCA), a milestone that reflects a decade of profound transformation for both the global cement industry and the wider world economy.
Founded in 2016 to provide an independent international platform for cement producers and industry stakeholders, the WCA has grown over the past ten years into a global network promoting cooperation, innovation, sustainability, and operational excellence across the sector.
The Association’s first decade has coincided with one of the most turbulent and transformative periods in modern history. Over the past ten years, the world has faced the COVID-19 pandemic, geopolitical conflicts, energy crises, supply chain disruption, accelerating climate change, inflationary pressures, and rapid technological advancement driven by digitalization and artificial intelligence. These developments have reshaped global trade, manufacturing, construction, and industrial policy, while placing increasing pressure on heavy industries to adapt and decarbonize.
Against this backdrop, the global cement industry has undergone significant structural change. Markets have shifted geographically toward Asia and emerging economies, sustainability has become central to corporate strategy, and innovation in low-carbon technologies, alternative fuels, digital manufacturing, and circular economy practices has accelerated at an unprecedented pace.
WCA President, Dr. Wei Rushan, reflected on the anniversary and emphasised that “The last ten years have tested every industry in ways few could have predicted. The global cement sector has had to adapt continuously to a rapidly changing world. Throughout this period, the WCA has served as a platform for collaboration, knowledge sharing, and innovation across borders.”
WCA CEO, Philippe Richart, expressed how “The industry has had to navigate extraordinary external pressures affecting economies and societies worldwide. Over the past decade, we have seen growing momentum behind decarbonisation, alternative fuels, clinker reduction, carbon capture technologies, and intelligent manufacturing. Looking ahead, the pace of change will only accelerate.”
“Artificial intelligence, digitalisation, circular economy models, and breakthrough low-carbon technologies will fundamentally reshape cement production and construction materials over the next ten years. The WCA remains committed to supporting its members and the wider industry through this transformation,” Mr. Richart said.
As the WCA enters its second decade, the Association reaffirmed its commitment to the principle of “openness, inclusiveness, sharing and win-win” and to advancing sustainable development, fostering innovation, encouraging international collaboration, and supporting the cement industry’s long-term transition toward a lower-carbon and more resilient future.








