Skill Shortages are a Ticking Time Bomb, says NFRC

3 November 2021

nfrc-report state-of-the-trade-q3-2021|Phil Campbell NFRC Head of Policy and Communications

THE NFRC is warning of a roofing and cladding skill shortages ticking time bomb as research from Glenigan shows that over three-quarters of roofing and cladding contractors (77%) report difficulties recruiting suitable labour in the third quarter of 2021.

Skill Shortages

Slaters and tilers were the roles in most demand by contractors, according to the NFRC/Glenigan State of the Roofing Industry Survey, reflecting the booming UK new build housing market. But a number of flat roofing roles, such as in the built-up flat roofing and single ply disciplines, were also reported as being difficult to find. Further to this, just under one in ten NFRC members reported difficulties recruiting cladders, which could have an impact on the government’s £5bn cladding remediation scheme.

Cost of Labour

Roofing contractors have seen the cost of labour go up as a result, with just over half of roofing companies reporting an increase (57%) on this time last year. Alongside this, 92% of roofers have seen material prices rise.

The Q3 State of the Roofing Industry found:

A net balance of 40% of roofing contractors reported growing workloads, down from 54% in the previous quarter.

    • A balance of 28% of members reported higher enquiries.
    • Employment levels grew, with 12% of contractors reporting a growing headcount.
    • The north of England and Scotland saw the highest levels of growth, with Wales being the only part of the UK that saw workloads and enquiries fall on the previous quarter.
    • Over three quarters (77%) of roofing firms reported a deterioration of material availability over the quarter, with 31% reporting shortages of ‘all materials’.
    • 92% of roofing contractors reported a rise in material prices.
    • 70% of roofers increased their tender prices over the period.
    • Ahead of COP26, just under half (48%) of roofing contractors were developing or considering developing a net-zero strategy.

Philip Campbell, NFRC Head of Policy and Communications

NFRC’s Head of Policy, Philip Campbell said: “The headlines recently have been focused, rightly, on HGV driver shortages, but the next ticking skills time bomb is construction skill shortages, particularly in roofing.

“We have seen skill shortages become a big concern for roofing contractors throughout this year, and our most recent survey found that three-quarters of our members are now having recruitment difficulties on all sorts of roles from roof slaters and tilers to cladders.

“The Chancellor confirmed multi-billion-pound funding commitments for housing, levelling up, and cladding remediation, but the government may fall short on these targets if the construction skills aren’t there to deliver. We saw what happened with the Green Homes Grant when government ambition and supply chain capacity aren’t aligned.

“More generally, whilst it was encouraging to see the roofing and cladding industry grow again this quarter, we saw the rate of growth slow, particularly in the domestic, repair, maintenance, and improvement sector, which could be the result of ongoing material and skill shortages. Roofers continue to remain optimistic for the future, however.”

>>Read more roofing industry reports

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