Skip to main content

Amey moves back down under

UK contractor Amey will now operate in Australia again through its recent acquisition of engineering consultancy Premise.
By David Arminas July 23, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Premise worked on the Fitzroy River Bridge project in Rockhampton, Queensland, after extensive flooding damaged the structure (image © Kerrod Casey/Dreamstime)

UK consultancy Amey has re-entered the Australian market with the acquisition of Premise, a consultancy operating in the transport, built environment, water and environmental/renewables sectors.

Amey retreated from the Australian continent in 2020 after a restructuring by its then parent company Ferrovial.

In 2013, Amey won a five-year, US$108 million highway maintenance contract for the Department of Transport and Main Roads in the Australian state of Queensland. For the contract, Amey was part of a joint venture with Leighton Contractors and Boral Construction Materials. The joint venture maintained and improved more than 1,000km of roads, including over 650km of state and national roads, from the south of Brisbane to the New South Wales state border, including the Gold Coast where the 2018 Commonwealth Games were held.

Amey split from Ferrovial in December 2022 and is now owned by private equity investors Buckthorn Partners and One Equity Partners.

A statement from Amey said Premise, based in Brisbane, “will provide a strengthened platform of digital and technical expertise and capability, providing an unrivalled range of services to new and existing clients in both the UK and Australia, New Zealand and other target geographies”.

“Our two companies share a common culture of behaving responsibly, ethically, and sustainably in everything we do, with a clear focus on the wellbeing of our people and the communities we serve,” said Andy Milner, chief executive of Amey. “Together, with their local knowledge and Amey’s scale, we are well positioned to accelerate growth, support jobs, and deliver cutting-edge infrastructure solutions that make a lasting impact.”

Earlier this year Milner hinted that some kind of acquisition was likely overseas, given slow growth in the UK for Amey. For the year ending December 2024, Amey UK group revenue was up only 1% from £1, 832.9 million to £1,850.6 million. But operating pre-tax profit was up a healthy 30% to £126.7 million.

In November last year, Premise merged with KCTT, a Western Australian civil and transport engineering Company. KCTT entered the market in 2011 as a boutique civil and traffic engineering consultancy. In the 12 years of operation, the company had grown to 20 staff with an office located in Balcatta, Perth.

In 2022, Premise picked up Southern Cross Consulting Surveyors.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Palfinger Q1 performance boosts confidence for full year
    April 29, 2016
    Crane and lifting manufacturer Palfinger Group has reported a record increase for first quarter revenue, up by 9.1% to €318.8 million (Q1 2015: €292.3 million). EBIT – earnings before interest and tax - also showed an “extraordinarily strong increase” of 28.6% from €23.5 million to €30.2 million, which is a new record as well. “This generated a marked increase in the EBIT margin, which came to 9.5%, as compared to 8% in the first quarter of the previous year.”
  • The Volvo Group is appointing a new CEO
    January 6, 2017
    The Volvo Group has removed Olof Persson from the role of president and CEO of the company. This move came following pressure from certain shareholders due to the group’s weak financial performance in recent years. Instead the Volvo group plans to appoint Scania’s head Martin Lundstedt to the role. Lundstedt will take the post in October 2015, with the Volvo Group’s chief financial officer, Jan Gurander, standing in as temporary president and CEO.
  • The Volvo Group is appointing a new CEO
    April 24, 2015
    The Volvo Group has removed Olof Persson from the role of president and CEO of the company. This move came following pressure from certain shareholders due to the group’s weak financial performance in recent years. Instead the Volvo group plans to appoint Scania’s head Martin Lundstedt to the role. Lundstedt will take the post in October 2015, with the Volvo Group’s chief financial officer, Jan Gurander, standing in as temporary president and CEO.
  • Wacker Neuson posts strong 2023 revenue
    March 27, 2024
    Despite a difficult second half of the year, group revenue rose again by 17.9% to €2,654.9 million.