Welsh construction is something we can all be proud of – certainly we had the chance to celebrate on Friday night last week at the CEW Awards. What a great evening. But the key message to take from the awards is not just how good our industry is right now, but the evidence the CEW Awards points towards.
Five hundred and fifty guests, winners, highly commended and the great and the good from the Welsh supply chain all celebrated ten years of the CEW Awards and yet more evidence that best practice is building a better Wales.
Wednesday’s AGM saw Richard Wilson, chairman of CEW stand down and Rhodri-Gwynn Jones is stepping in to his shoes as CEW focus on building a Wales for tomorrow.
We’re a few weeks in to life with Theresa May as Prime Minister and with the cabinet taking shape and rhetoric being delivered we still don’t know if May is good for construction – or do we?
A strong UK construction industry is good for Wales. So it is worth contributing and supporting the Midlands Construction Summit that seeks to address key industry issues – particularly Brexit and the political landscape in the UK
Stronger, more focussed action is needed to protect communities in Wales from the risks of Climate Change, says Sophie Howe, Future Generations Commissioner for Wales
Innovate UK is driving ideas in the UK, particularly around business led innovative projects in infrastructure. They are running a competition to challenge industry – the winners gain £15M investment