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    Home » Alan Dickson Takes Helm at AECI
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    Alan Dickson Takes Helm at AECI

    June 2, 2026
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    Alan Dickson AECI CEO
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    AECI has appointed seasoned industrial executive Alan Dickson as its new chief executive officer, marking the next phase in the chemicals and explosives group’s turnaround and growth strategy as it seeks to build on improving operational performance.

    The Johannesburg-listed group confirmed that Dickson will assume the roles of CEO and executive director from 1 July 2026 following a formal executive search process. He succeeds interim chief executive Dean Murray, who has led the company since October 2025 after the departure of former CEO Holger Riemensperger.

    The appointment comes at an important juncture for AECI. While the group has faced several years of restructuring, portfolio optimisation and margin pressure across parts of its chemicals business, recent financial results indicate that management’s efforts to improve operational performance are beginning to gain traction.

    AECI reported a significant improvement in earnings for the 2025 financial year, supported largely by strong demand from the mining sector. Headline earnings per share rose 53% to 1,098 cents, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation from continuing operations increased 12% to R3.4 billion. Revenue from continuing operations declined 4% to R32.18 billion, reflecting a focus on profitability, operational discipline and portfolio rationalisation rather than pure top-line growth.

    AECI Financial Performance (FY2025)

    MetricFY2025Change
    RevenueR32.18bn-4%
    EBITDAR3.4bn+12%
    HEPS1,098c+53%
    CEO Appointment Effective1 July 2026–

    The improvement was driven primarily by AECI’s mining division, which remains one of the group’s most strategically important businesses. The company supplies explosives, blasting technologies and mining chemicals to operations across Africa, Australia, Latin America and North America. Global mining activity has remained relatively resilient despite economic uncertainty, supported by demand for critical minerals required for energy transition technologies, electrification and infrastructure development.

    Dickson arrives with nearly three decades of leadership experience at JSE-listed industrial and technology group Reunert, one of South Africa’s longest-established diversified industrial companies. He served as Reunert’s chief executive from 2014 until 2026, overseeing businesses spanning electrical engineering, telecommunications, renewable energy infrastructure, power systems and defence-related technologies.

    During his tenure, Reunert expanded its position in several growth sectors, including renewable energy and telecommunications infrastructure, while maintaining a disciplined approach to capital allocation and shareholder returns. Analysts have frequently cited the company’s ability to generate consistent cash flows and navigate difficult economic cycles as key strengths under Dickson’s leadership.

    His appointment signals AECI’s intention to continue focusing on operational execution, capital discipline and long-term value creation. These priorities have become increasingly important across South Africa’s industrial sector as companies contend with rising input costs, energy instability, logistics constraints and subdued domestic economic growth.

    According to Statistics South Africa, manufacturing activity remains under pressure despite pockets of resilience in chemicals, mining-related production and export-oriented industries. The country’s industrial sector has increasingly relied on operational efficiency, technology investment and international diversification to sustain earnings growth.

    AECI’s board indicated that Dickson’s experience managing large and complex industrial organisations aligns closely with the group’s strategic priorities. These include strengthening operational performance, maintaining rigorous safety standards, improving returns on capital and driving sustainable growth across its global operations.

    Safety remains a particularly critical issue for AECI given the nature of its operations. The group operates across chemicals manufacturing, mining explosives, water treatment technologies and agricultural solutions, sectors where operational risk management is central to both regulatory compliance and business performance.

    Dickson’s academic background combines technical and business expertise. He holds Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees from the University of the Witwatersrand, as well as an MBA from Wits Business School. He is also a member of the South African Institute of Electrical Engineers.

    For investors, the leadership transition provides greater certainty after several months of interim management. Market participants will now be watching closely to see how Dickson balances growth opportunities with the continued restructuring and optimisation initiatives already underway.

    The challenge facing the new CEO extends beyond sustaining recent earnings momentum. AECI operates in industries undergoing significant change, including mining, chemicals, agriculture and infrastructure development. Increasing environmental regulation, the shift towards lower-carbon operations, evolving customer requirements and advances in industrial technology are reshaping competitive dynamics across all of these sectors.

    At the same time, opportunities remain substantial. Global demand for mining solutions linked to critical minerals, water treatment technologies and specialised chemicals continues to expand, particularly across emerging markets. AECI’s established presence in these segments positions the group to benefit from long-term structural trends if it can continue improving operational performance and executing its growth strategy.

    Dickson therefore takes charge of a company that has emerged from a period of transition with stronger earnings momentum but still faces the task of converting operational improvements into sustained long-term growth. His performance will likely be measured not only by profitability, but also by his ability to strengthen AECI’s position as one of Africa’s leading industrial, chemicals and mining solutions groups.

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