Spending on Infrastructure falls back as education sees a boost in the wake of RAAC scandal

Latest News Mon, Sep 11, 2023 5:49 AM

Spending on UK infrastructure fell back 39% to £1.2bn in August after July’s £2.0bn, although contract awards overall remained relatively healthy for the second month in a row with £6.3bn according to Barbour ABI’s latest analysis.

And the bad news for infrastructure looks set to continue with a commensurate 55% drop in approvals in August.

Meanwhile, the education sector saw some positives in the wake of recent chaos around RAAC repairs.

Barbour ABI Chief Economist Tom Hall commented: “All eyes are on the education sector following the scandal around crumbling concrete in schools. It may, therefore, come as a small positive for those affected that spending in the form of new project contracts increased 34% to £700m in August, driven largely by secondary school redevelopments. Approvals were also positive, with projects worth £500m moving through the pipeline and £400m of project applications in July.”

August also saw a continuation of higher spending levels for the commercial sector with £1.0bn in contracts awarded thanks to several large mixed-use projects in London and a positive month for healthcare with £300m.

Hotel and leisure appeared to be slowly returning to normal levels post-Covid but remains dependent on small numbers of larger projects.

Planning approvals continued a mini-resurgence with £8.9bn worth of projects in August. This was the third month of higher activity after a slump in the new financial year. The recovery has been driven by recoveries in the residential, infrastructure and industrial sectors, and a strong Q3 result is all but certain.

However, there was still no good news for planning applications, with continuing low activity since the beginning of the year pointing to a challenging future for the industry as the pipeline dries out. In particular, extreme weakness in the residential sector remained clear, with just £3.3bn of new applications in the latest monthly figures.

“In the wider construction environment, confirmed activity remains very uncertain, and prospects remain muted for the second half of 2023,” concluded Hall.

Featured News

Specification news
New C20 campaign celebrates buildings turning 30

In November 1994, the first Eurostar service pulled out of London’s Waterloo...

Read More >>

Specification news
UK’s ‘Golden Triangle’ third in top 10 locations...

Boston ranks top in Savills global index of the world’s top 30 life science hubs,...

Read More >>

BUILDING PRODUCT LIBRARY - LATEST BROCHURES

Gerflor Taraflex® Sports Flooring | 2024 | EN Brochure

Gerflor Taraflex® Sp...
By Gerflor

Download Now >>

Gerflor Social Housing Floors | 2024 | EN Brochure

Gerflor Social Housi...
By Gerflor

Download Now >>

Gerflor Retail Flooring | 2024 | EN Brochure

Gerflor Retail Floor...
By Gerflor

Download Now >>

Gerflor Industry Flooring | 2024 | EN Brochure

Gerflor Industry Flo...
By Gerflor

Download Now >>

Gerflor Hospitality Flooring | 2024 | EN Brochure

Gerflor Hospitality...
By Gerflor

Download Now >>

BUILDING PRODUCT DIRECTORY - LATEST PRODUCTS

Straightcurve®
Straightcurve®

Straightcurve® – headquartered in Australia, is renowned for high-end innovative garden edging,...

Read More >>

RLG600 Access Flooring System
RLG600 Access Flooring System

The Kingspan RLG600 raised access floor panel is intended for light office use and is capable of...

Read More >>

RHG600 Simploc
RHG600 Simploc

Kingspan RHG600 Simploc is the heavy grade floor system, capable of handling up to a 12kN/m2...

Read More >>

CONSTRUCTION VIDEOS - LATEST VIDEOS

Discover the first-ever reference book for stone wool insulated sandwich panels
Discover the first-ever reference book for stone wool insulated sandwich panels

“Building with stone wool insulated sandwich panels” written by Professor Imperadori, is now...

Watch Now >>

Portakabin | Installation at the iconic Admiralty Arch, London
Portakabin | Installation at the iconic Admiralty Arch, London

Portakabin | Installation at the iconic Admiralty Arch, London

Watch Now >>