New Delhi, February, 2026.
The Cement Manufacturers’ Association (CMA)
welcomes the Union Budget 2026-27 for reinforcing the ambitions for the Nation’s
growth balancing the aspirations of the people through inclusivity inspired by
the vision of Shri Narendra Modi ji, Hon’ble Prime Minister of India, for a Viksit
Bharat by 2047 and Atmanirbharta.
The Budget underscores India’s steady economic
trajectory over the past 12 years, marked by fiscal discipline, sustained
growth and moderate inflation, and offers strong demand visibility for
infrastructure linked sectors such as Cement.
The Budget’s strong infrastructure push, with
public capital expenditure rising from ₹11.2 lakh crore in fiscal year 2025–26
to ₹12.2 lakh crore in fiscal year 2026–27, recognises infrastructure as the
primary anchor for economic growth creating positive prospects for the Indian
Cement Industry and improving long term visibility for the Cement sector. The
emphasis on Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities with populations above 5 lakh and the
creation of City Economic Regions (CERs) with an allocation of ₹5,000 crore per
CER over five years, should accelerate construction activity across housing,
transport and urban services, supporting broad based Cement consumption.
Logistics and connectivity measures announced in
the Budget are particularly significant for the Cement Industry. The
announcement of new dedicated freight corridors, the operationalisation of 20
additional National Waterways over the next five years, the launch of the
Coastal Cargo Promotion Scheme to raise the modal share of waterways and
coastal shipping from 6% to 12% by 2047, and the development of ship repair
ecosystems should enhance multimodal freight efficiency, reduce logistics costs
and improve the Sector’s carbon footprint. The announcement of seven high speed
rail corridors as growth corridors can be expected to further stimulate
regional development and construction demand.
Commenting on the Budget, Mr Parth Jindal,
President, Cement Manufacturers’ Association (CMA), said, “As India advances
towards a Viksit Bharat, the three kartavya articulated in the
Union Budget provide a clear context for the Nation’s growth and aspirations,
combining economic momentum with capacity building and inclusive progress. The
Cement Manufacturers’ Association (CMA) appreciates the Union Budget 2026-27 for
the continued emphasis on manufacturing competitiveness, urban development and
infrastructure modernisation, supported by over 350 reforms spanning GST
simplification, labour codes, quality control rationalisation and coordinated
deregulation with States. These reforms, alongside the Budget’s focus on Youth
Power and domestic manufacturing capacity under Atmanirbharta, stand
to strengthen the investment environment for capital intensive sectors such as
Cement. The Union Budget 2026-27 reflects the Government’s focus on
infrastructure led development emerging as a structural pillar of India’s
growth strategy.
The ₹20,000 crore CCUS outlay for various
sectors, including Cement, fundamentally alters the decarbonisation landscape
for India’s emissions intensive industries. CCUS is a significant enabler for
large scale decarbonisation of industries such as Cement and this intervention
directly addresses the technology and cost requirements of the Cement sector in
context. The Cement Industry, fully aligned with the Government of India’s Net
Zero commitment by 2070, views this support as critical to enabling the
adoption and scale up of CCUS technologies while continuing to meet the
Country’s long term infrastructure needs.”
Dr Raghavpat Singhania, Vice President, CMA, said, “The Government’s sustained
infrastructure push supports employment, regional development and stronger
local supply chains. Cement manufacturing clusters act as economic anchors
across regions, generating livelihoods in construction, logistics and allied
sectors. The Budget’s focus on inclusive growth, execution and system level
enablers creates a supportive environment for responsible and efficient
expansion offering opportunities for economic growth and lending momentum to
the Cement sector. The increase in public capex to ₹12.2 lakh crore, the focus
on Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, and the creation of City Economic Regions stand to
strengthen the growth of the Cement sector. We welcome the Budget’s emphasis on
tourism, cultural and social infrastructure, which should broaden construction
activity across regions. Investments in tourism facilities, heritage and
Buddhist circuits, regional connectivity in Purvodaya and North Eastern
States, and the strengthening of emergency and trauma care infrastructure in
district hospitals reinforce the Cement sector’s role in enabling inclusive
growth.
CMA notes positively the Government’s continued
commitment to fiscal discipline, with the fiscal deficit estimated at 4.3%
of GDP for fiscal year 2026-27, reinforcing macroeconomic stability and
investor confidence. As India progresses towards Viksit Bharat 2047, the
Cement Industry reaffirms its commitment to working closely with the Government
to build resilient, sustainable and inclusive infrastructure that supports long
term national development.