OK, so are all those loads fed from the one panel? If so, does that panel already exist? If the panel doesn't exist, are you needing to size the incoming cable to the panel and is this panel going to be fed from one of the other installed distribution panels that have the 6kA switchgear or from the the larger board that feeds these panels?
Firstly, if you are only feeding these small loads from an existing panel, it is likely based on what you have described that you are using MCBs (Miniture Circuit Breakers) not MCCBs (Mould Case Circuit Breakers) as stated previously. If a circuit breaker is rated at 6kA is is almost certainly an MCB. MCCBs are much larger and have higher ratings (usually at least 25kA).
If they are 60898 MCBs (as per BS EN 60898) a class 3, C Curve, 6kA (should be labelled with 6000 in a box with a 3 in the box under) device rated 20A to 32A should limit let-through energy to 52kA^2s at the high end.
A PVC 2.5mm2 cable can withstand about 77kA^2s (k=111, S=2.5). So should be OK.
Bear in mind the use of 6kA breakers does not mean the calculated maximum fault level is at or less than that. The MCBs may have been cascaded with a breaker upstream that is protecting the smaller breaker at a fault level above its native breaking level. When cascaded, the let through energy shown before, should still hold, but be sure to use the same make of breaker throughout.
If you are protecting the incomer to the board with a smallish breaker for the 35A load (maybe a 40A MCB?? although i'd go larger) it will be very difficult to achieve discrimination between that breaker and the ones feeding these small loads. A trip on one breaker may trip the upstream breaker too, taking out the whole board. This might be OK if nothing is critical and there are no safety circuits. There are rules of thumb in AS3000 for this, but they will unlikely produce a true discriminated solution.
Of course, none of this can really answer if the disconnect time requirement from AS3000 is satisfied. Again you could refer to AS3000 to add up impedances but that is a guesstimate at best but would cover your backside. To be strictly accurate you'd need to know all the cables back the the transformer.
If you are sizing the circuit breakers, don't forget to size the DOL motor breaker to 2.5x to 3x the running current to allow for starting current.