Etude de marché du béton

L'industrie du béton est un pilier essentiel du secteur mondial de la construction en raison de sa durabilité, de sa résistance et de sa polyvalence. À ce titre, comprendre la dynamique du marché du béton est crucial pour les acteurs du secteur de la construction.
Pour cette raison, des études de marché concrètes permettent aux entreprises de se tenir au courant des innovations et des tendances du marché et de profiter des opportunités en temps opportun.
Comprendre le béton et ses utilisations
Des infrastructures telles que les ponts, les routes et les barrages aux bâtiments, tant résidentiels que commerciaux, le béton est un élément clé du secteur de la construction. Sa capacité à résister à des charges de compression élevées le rend idéal pour les éléments structurels tels que les fondations, les murs et les colonnes. De plus, en raison de sa résistance au feu et de son efficacité énergétique, il constitue souvent le matériau de choix pour des raisons de sécurité et de durabilité.
China is the largest producer of concrete in the world, given its rapid urbanization and ongoing infrastructure development. Major Chinese concrete companies include China National Building Material Company and Anhui Conch Cement.
Les États-Unis disposent également d’un marché du béton important, avec des sociétés comme CEMEX et Vulcan Materials qui sont des acteurs majeurs du secteur.
En Europe, des pays comme l'Allemagne, l'Italie et la France sont d'importants producteurs de béton, avec des sociétés telles que Heidelberg Cement et Lafarge Holcim.
Concrete Market Research: How Leading Building Material Firms Win Share
Concrete is the second most consumed material on earth after water. The category is also one of the least understood at the boardroom level, which is why rigorous Concrete Market Research has become a competitive weapon for cement majors, ready-mix operators, admixture suppliers, and infrastructure contractors.
The buyers who matter sit at the intersection of specification, logistics, and carbon accounting. Reaching them requires field discipline, not desk research. The firms gaining share are those treating concrete as a system of decisions made by engineers, procurement officers, and policy bodies rather than a commodity sold by the cubic yard.
Why Concrete Market Research Demands a Different Playbook
Concrete sits inside a 90-minute delivery radius. That single physical constraint reshapes everything: pricing power, M&A logic, plant siting, and competitive mapping. National market share is a misleading metric. The unit of analysis is the metro batch plant footprint and the project pipeline within reach of it.
The category is also engineering-led. Specifications written by structural engineers and DOT authorities determine which mixes qualify long before procurement opens a bid. Influence happens upstream, at the design table, where supplementary cementitious materials, fiber reinforcement, and performance-based specs are negotiated. Research that surveys only purchasing agents misses the actual decision.
SIS International Research’s B2B expert interview programs across cement, aggregates, and admixture clients consistently show that specification influence outweighs price competition by a wide margin in commercial and infrastructure projects, while residential and small commercial work remains transactional. The two segments require entirely separate go-to-market models, and firms that conflate them lose margin in both.
The Decarbonization Premium Reshaping Demand
Portland cement accounts for roughly 8% of global CO2 emissions. That fact has moved from sustainability report to procurement criterion. EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism filings, California Buy Clean requirements, and General Services Administration low-embodied-carbon thresholds are now scoring concrete bids on Environmental Product Declarations rather than compressive strength alone.
Holcim, Heidelberg Materials, CRH, and Cemex have all repositioned product portfolios around calcined clay blends, ground granulated blast-furnace slag substitution, and CO2-injected ready-mix. The competitive question is no longer whether to offer low-carbon concrete. It is which mix designs hold structural performance at scale and which jurisdictions will pay the premium.
This is where total cost of ownership analysis separates winners. A mix that reduces embodied carbon but extends cure times by 40% adds schedule cost on a critical-path job. Buyers running disciplined TCO models often choose differently than buyers running spec-sheet comparisons.
Competitive Intelligence Beyond the Top Four Producers
The cement majors get the headlines. The margin sits with admixture chemistry firms, precast specialists, and regional ready-mix consolidators. Sika, GCP Applied Technologies, Master Builders Solutions, and Mapei command pricing power that the bulk producers cannot match because their products are specified by name in design documents.
Effective competitive intelligence in this category requires three layers: installed base analytics on which contractors run which batch plant equipment, supplier qualification audits against state DOT approved product lists, and bill of materials decomposition on competing precast and prefab systems. Public filings reveal almost none of this. It surfaces only through structured conversations with plant managers, project engineers, and DOT materials labs.
In structured expert interviews conducted by SIS with senior procurement and engineering leaders across North American and European infrastructure programs, the most consistent finding is that admixture switching costs are routinely underestimated by new entrants. Trial pours, mix redesigns, and DOT recertification cycles can absorb 12 to 18 months before a single yard ships at scale.
Where the Aftermarket Revenue Strategy Is Hiding
Concrete looks like a one-time sale. It is not. Repair mortars, surface treatments, joint sealants, cathodic protection systems, and structural health monitoring sensors generate recurring revenue tied to the installed base of structures. Bridges, parking structures, and water infrastructure built decades ago are now the addressable market for the repair category.
Sika and BASF have built substantial businesses here. Most cement producers have not. The reason is organizational: bulk sales teams are not configured to call on facility owners, asset managers, and rehabilitation contractors. Research that quantifies the installed base by age cohort, exposure class, and asset owner type reveals where the next decade of revenue lives.
The SIS Framework for Concrete Market Research
SIS International applies a four-layer model when scoping engagements in this category:
| Layer | Research Focus | Primary Method |
|---|---|---|
| Specification | Engineer and DOT preference, mix design trends, performance spec adoption | B2B expert interviews with structural engineers and materials labs |
| Approvisionnement | Bid behavior, supplier qualification, TCO modeling, switching cost | Procurement officer interviews, supplier audit reviews |
| Production | Batch plant economics, logistics radius, capacity utilization | Plant manager interviews, site visits, ethnographic observation |
| Policy | Embodied carbon rules, Buy Clean thresholds, code adoption | Regulatory tracking, agency interviews, EPD database analysis |
Source: SIS International Research
Each layer produces decisions a different executive owns. Conflating them produces reports that no one acts on. Separating them produces intelligence that informs capital allocation, pricing, and product roadmap independently.
What Reshoring and Infrastructure Spending Mean for the Category

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the CHIPS Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act have committed substantial federal capital to projects that consume concrete: bridges, transit, semiconductor fabs, transmission, and battery plants. Reshoring feasibility studies for industrial clients now turn on whether regional batch plant capacity and aggregate supply can serve a fab or gigafactory site without 18-month lead times.
This has shifted the research question from “what is the market size” to “what is the project pipeline within delivery radius and which competitors hold capacity contracts already.” Market entry assessments that fail to map plant utilization, rail-served aggregate sources, and DOT prequalification status produce sizings that look attractive on paper and impossible in practice.
SIS International’s market entry assessments in industrial construction have repeatedly identified that the binding constraint on greenfield projects is not concrete demand but cementitious material logistics, particularly fly ash availability as coal plants retire and slag cement supply tightens.
The Quotable Frame

Concrete is local, specified upstream, scored on carbon, and monetized across the asset life. Research that treats it as a commodity sold to procurement misses four of the four decisions that actually move share.
The firms gaining ground in this category are running Concrete Market Research as a continuous intelligence program rather than a one-time sizing exercise. They watch specification trends, EPD filings, project pipelines, and competitor plant utilization the way consumer firms watch shelf data. The discipline compounds.
À propos de SIS International
SIS International propose des recherches quantitatives, qualitatives et stratégiques. Nous fournissons des données, des outils, des stratégies, des rapports et des informations pour la prise de décision. Nous menons également des entretiens, des enquêtes, des groupes de discussion et d’autres méthodes et approches d’études de marché. Contactez nous pour votre prochain projet d'étude de marché.

