Demand for Mineral Products Drops
Latest quarterly survey by MPA shows demand for aggregates, asphalt and
ready-mixed concrete, declined for a second successive quarter in Q3 2022.
Mineral Product Association (MPA) members supply around 90% of the
total market for minerals and mineral products in Great Britain, predominantly
to the construction industry. These materials are needed in the early phases of
construction projects, forming the foundation and structure for roads,
railways, housing, commercial and industrial developments, as well as key
national infrastructure including for energy and water.
The essential requirement of these materials in construction means that
the tonnage sold provides a crucial gauge of the construction sector’s wider
health. Whilst softer growth in sales volumes was expected this year following
the sharp covid-related recovery in 2021, the downward correction has been
deeper and occurred more quickly than anticipated. The decline in demand over
the summer suggests that a more widespread cooling in construction activity may
already be underway.
The latest 2022Q3 survey revealed sales volumes for primary aggregates
(quarried crushed rock, and land-based and marine-dredged sand and gravel), as
well as for asphalt and ready-mixed concrete were not only down on 2021, but
also below their 2019 levels. Over the past year compared to 2019, aggregates
sales have fallen 2.3%, asphalt by 1.1% and ready-mix concrete by 10.1%.
Momentum in mineral products demand dropped off markedly from June,
with the main concern being that widespread cost inflation throughout the
construction supply chain may have started to negatively impact on demand. An
otherwise solid pipeline of future construction projects is being hindered by
the unprecedented cost pressures for energy, raw materials and labour, and
paving the way to a wider industry slowdown.
Most sectors of construction are vulnerable to the impact of cost
increases and a wider economic slowdown, whether directly or indirectly.
Directly, surging cost inflation and higher borrowing costs negatively impacts
on the commercial viability of future projects and undermines household
incomes. Indirectly, investment decisions are also held back by lower business
and household confidence.
As a result, whilst demand for mineral products continues to be
supported by activity on major infrastructure projects and in housebuilding,
broad weaknesses are starting to emerge.
Within aggregates, sand & gravel sales have been muted across all
English regions and devolved administrations due to languishing sales of
ready-mixed concrete, which accounts for around two-thirds of total sand and
gravel demand. Ready-mixed concrete demand has been held back by subdued
appetite for big office and retail projects in recent years, due to heightened
economic and political uncertainty. Sales of sand & gravel and ready-mixed
concrete remain well below pre-pandemic levels and have drifted further down in
the past year.
Crushed rock sales are also weaker than they were a year ago. HS2 and
road projects have bolstered demand for crushed rock as fill material and in
the manufacture of asphalt, but road upgrades and maintenance work is now under
considerable pressure from rising costs, especially given already strained
Local Authorities' budgets. In the past year, both asphalt and crushed sales
have declined by around 5%.
Mortar sales by contrast are largely driven by housebuilding activity,
with high property prices having helped drive an upturn in new housing starts
in the first half of 2022. As a result, mortar demand in the past 12 months
resulted in sales volumes exceeding pre-pandemic levels (+0.6%). However,
whilst current housing activity remains robust, the cost-of-living crisis and
increases in interest rates are chipping away at confidence and hampering next
year’s prospects.
Luke George, economic and policy analyst at the MPA, warned that the
reduction in demand for minerals is expected to continue in the final months of
the year and into next year.
“The slowdown in mineral products sales volumes over the summer
reaffirmed that the confidence loss in June has become more entrenched.
Prospects for the UK economy and construction activity look bleak given major
headwinds from high inflation and the new Government’s fiscal U-turn, which
will almost inevitably lead to higher taxes, lower spending and lower
confidence,” he said.
“We still expect that major projects like HS2 and investment in new
energy infrastructure will help to support demand for minerals and mineral
products in the medium term, albeit government backing for new capital projects
cannot be guaranteed as the Treasury seeks billions of pounds in spending cuts.
The need to balance the books is well understood, but as we have seen since the
aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009, cutting capital infrastructure
spending can create longer term structural imbalances in the economy and impact
on growth delivery.
“Sectors most closely linked to household incomes, such as new
private housing and home improvement, will be vulnerable with interest rates at
their highest level in 14 years. The current economic backdrop is not conducive
of new investment and big financial commitments.”
Aurelie Delannoy, director of economic affairs at MPA added:
“Unprecedented uncertainty at the heart of Government’s policy is an unhelpful
distraction and potential cuts to capital budgets a drag on industry
confidence. A lack of emphasis on planning reforms continues to ignore the
MPA’s repeated calls for better delivery of infrastructure projects and the
activities that support them, including the extraction of essential
construction minerals. Support on energy bills is welcomed, but a lack of
stability and longer-term strategic thinking remains a cause of concern for our
industry.”