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    Mining drives Indigenous business growth: procurement lessons for project teams

    December 9, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Mining drives Indigenous business growth: procurement lessons for project teams

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    Total procurement spend with Indigenous-owned businesses has reached $5.83 billion, with mining and resources now the largest single driver of demand for Supply Nation–registered suppliers. The State of the Indigenous Business report points to major contracts in mine site services, civil works and haulage as key growth areas, with Tier 1 miners increasingly using mandated Indigenous participation targets in procurement panels. For engineers and project managers, this signals more joint ventures, Indigenous subcontracting on bulk earthworks and haul road construction, and tighter reporting on Indigenous spend.

    Technical Brief

    • Civil construction, mine site services and bulk haulage contracts are identified as the highest-value mining-related categories.
    • Tier 1 miners are increasingly using long-term panel arrangements to lock in Indigenous contractors for recurring works.
    • Reported contracts range from small plant hire packages to multi-year, multi-million-dollar mine services agreements.
    • Data is drawn from Supply Nation–registered buyers and suppliers, so excludes unregistered Indigenous procurement.
    • Compliance reporting on Indigenous spend is moving from annual, aggregate figures to contract-level tracking and auditing.
    • For new mining projects, early packaging of earthworks and haulage scopes is becoming critical to meet Indigenous targets.

    Our Take

    Within our 207 Mining stories, Australia is one of the few jurisdictions where Indigenous procurement data such as the A$5.83 billion spend is consistently disclosed, giving mining operators there clearer benchmarks for setting and tracking supplier diversity targets.

    For projects and contract awards tagged in Australia, Supply Nation’s involvement often signals that Tier 1 miners are formalising Indigenous participation through structured vendor panels rather than ad hoc subcontracting, which can influence how mid-tier contractors structure their own bids.

    The scale of Indigenous-owned business procurement in Australia is now material enough that, in our database, it frequently features in project evaluation narratives alongside safety and ESG metrics, suggesting that access to certified Indigenous suppliers is becoming a competitive factor in winning major mining contracts.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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