From Burden to Blueprint | Nexus

From burden to blueprint: Why asset transition and closure is now a boardroom conversation

Turning industrial closures into a growth strategy

By Andrew Alexander

21 January 2026

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In brief

  • Mindset shift from liability to opportunity: Asset closure is no longer a regulatory cost centre but a strategic lever that can strengthen competitiveness, build resilience and unlock value through repurposing for renewable energy, biodiversity projects and community regeneration.
  • Early planning drives better outcomes: Forward-looking leaders are integrating closure planning from the final investment decision stage, designing assets with future flexibility in mind to capture emerging opportunities.

The way we think about asset transition and closure is undergoing a fundamental shift. No longer just a regulatory afterthought or cost centre, closure is being recognised in boardrooms as a strategic lever — one that can strengthen competitiveness, build operational resilience and reduce long-term risk. For asset-intensive industries, this mindset adjustment is imperative.

The shift is driven by a convergence of forces: ageing infrastructure, investor scrutiny, regulatory tightening, growing public expectations and a rising awareness of how infrastructure and land can be repurposed to deliver economic, environmental and social value.

Closure planning and informed decision-making are now core to capital strategy, risk management and delivering measurable environmental and social outcomes. Forward-looking companies are reframing closure as a platform for innovation, regeneration and long-term value creation.

Against this backdrop, many companies are also discovering that their original cost assumptions and provisions for closure were significantly underestimated, with some liabilities escalating into the hundreds of millions — or billions — of dollars.

From sunk cost to value unlock

Closure was traditionally seen through a single lens: liability. Whether decommissioning a plant, restoring a mine site or closing a waste facility, the objective was once straightforward: comply with regulations, contain costs, manage environmental liabilities — and move on.

But this narrow framing is no longer fit for purpose. The future of closure lies in its potential to enable a transition to new uses, restore ecosystems, create jobs, generate clean energy and engage communities. With smart planning, the end of one lifecycle can mark the beginning of another.

“Closure isn’t simply winding things down. It should set the stage for what comes next. The decisions we make at the end of the asset lifecycle can unlock long-term value, if we plan for them from the beginning.”

Andrew Alexander
Principal – Infrastructure Investment and Capital Projects, Americas, GHD

Consider the repurposing of industrial sites for renewable energy hubs, biodiversity offsets or community-led regeneration projects. These aren’t fringe examples. They’re fast becoming mainstream opportunities. What was once seen as non-valuable land can now play a vital role in regional energy transitions, climate adaptation and sustainable development.

Many governments now mandate closure plans as part of the approvals process. In Australia, Canada and parts of Europe, closure and transition planning is not only a legal requirement, but also a visible component of ESG strategy. Regulatory regimes are evolving to demand earlier planning, more transparency and clearer pathways to land reuse and remediation.

Increasingly, governments, investors, regulators and local communities expect closure to deliver on multiple fronts: environmental performance, community input, land reuse potential and workforce transition. In this context, doing the minimum is no longer enough to align with expectations of critically important stakeholders and partners.

From cost centre to value centre: Unlocking new potential

Within this complexity and financial pressure lies an important realisation: closure doesn’t have to be an entirely sunk cost. When approached strategically, it can serve as a launchpad for new and unexpected value. Rather than viewing closure solely through a liability and cost lens, leading organisations are actively reframing it as a “value centre”. This mindset shift allows companies to unlock a range of beneficial outcomes, including:

  • Redevelopment potential: Transforming former industrial sites into new commercial or conservation areas, breathing new life into previously utilised land.
  • Repurposing of infrastructure for clean energy: Converting existing infrastructure for new, sustainable uses such as pumped hydro, solar farms or green hydrogen production facilities.
  • Social and economic renewal: Driving revitalisation in remote or deindustrialised communities, creating new opportunities where old ones have faded.
  • Enhanced investor confidence: Achieved through visible commitment to sustainability and responsible asset stewardship — qualities that are increasingly influencing capital decisions and stakeholder trust.

This profound change in perspective is redefining the purpose of asset closure. No longer a passive, compliance-driven process, it is now seen as an active strategy — one that can unlock future energy supply, support circular economy outcomes and deliver broader social and environmental impact.

These benefits are magnified when closure is approached at the portfolio level. Looking across multiple assets enables organisations to prioritise investment, share learnings and scale solutions that deliver long-term value.

The bottom line

Closure doesn’t have to be the end. It can be the beginning of something more valuable.

Forward-looking organisations are shifting from reactive remediation to strategic transition. This means planning for closure as early as final investment decision (FID), and designing assets with future use, flexibility and resilience in mind. As market demand grows for renewable energy infrastructure, circular land use and sustainable logistics, closure planning becomes a tool for capturing future opportunity, not just compliance.

Ultimately, organisations that treat closure as a designed outcome — not a deferred problem — will unlock long-term value, reduce transition risk and stay ahead of growing expectations. It’s a technical shift and a mindset shift. The question isn’t “how do we close?” It’s “what value can this closure create?”

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