Geomechanics.io

  • Free Tools
Sign UpLog In

Geomechanics.io

Geomechanics, Streamlined.

© 2026 Geomechanics.io. All rights reserved.

Geomechanics.io

CMRR-ioGEODB-ioHYDROGEO-ioQCDB-ioFree Tools & CalculatorsBlogLatest Industry News

Industries

MiningConstructionTunnelling

Company

Terms of UsePrivacy PolicyLinkedIn
    AllGeotechnicalMiningInfrastructureMaterialsHazardsEnvironmentalSoftwarePolicy
    Projects

    Building materials sector’s call for intervention: demand shock lens for project teams

    January 28, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Building materials sector’s call for intervention: demand shock lens for project teams

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    UK construction materials suppliers report demand, not supply, as the critical constraint, with UK brick deliveries to November 2025 down 6.1% year-on-year while brick stocks have climbed 14.5% to 542.1 million units. The CLC Material Supply Chain Group, co-chaired by Builders Merchants Federation chief executive John Newcomb and Construction Products Association chief executive Peter Caplehorn, cites concrete volumes falling about 28% nationally over four years and 39% in London over two years, alongside a 1.3% drop in Q4 2025 construction output despite 0.3% UK GDP growth in November. Producers are mothballing sites, delaying capex and cutting jobs, with the group warning that restarting capacity could take up to six months and urging targeted government stimulus focused on housing and residential RMI to avoid long-term structural damage.

    Technical Brief

    • CLC’s Product Availability Group has been re-tasked and renamed the Material Supply Chain Group.
    • Major manufacturers are mothballing sites, delaying capex and making redundancies to protect margins and cash.
    • Where plants are running at low base load, ramp-up to meet renewed demand could take six months.
    • Structural issues cited include delayed client investment decisions, planning capacity constraints and regulatory delays on new schemes.
    • Supply-chain failures are increasing, with a “steady stream of administrations” attributed to weak demand and rising costs.

    Our Take

    With brick stocks at 542.1 million and a six‑month lag to ramp production, any rapid acceleration in the UK’s 1.5‑million homes programme risks short‑term supply bottlenecks unless government signals and procurement pipelines are clarified well ahead of 2026.

    The UK focus in this piece contrasts with most of our 30 recent Materials stories, which are more skewed to project‑specific capex and execution; this suggests the Construction Leadership Council and Construction Products Association are now framing materials availability as a macro‑level constraint on national programmes such as the prison programme and Planning and Infrastructure Act schemes.

    Three consecutive difficult years for the sector into 2025 in a low‑growth UK environment (0.3% monthly GDP uptick) mean many manufacturers are likely running lean on labour and kiln capacity, so any policy‑driven demand surge could initially be met by price rises rather than volume increases.

    Geotechnical Software for Modern Teams

    Centralise site data, logs, and lab results with GEODB-io, CMRR-io, and HYDROGEO-io.

    No credit card required.

    • Save and export unlimited calculations
    • Advanced data visualisation
    • Generate professional PDF reports
    • Cloud storage for all your projects

    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

    Related Articles

    Carbon-catching concrete: Paebbl’s CO₂ mineralisation explained for engineers
    Materials
    1 day ago

    Carbon-catching concrete: Paebbl’s CO₂ mineralisation explained for engineers

    Nordic–Dutch startup Paebbl is producing an olivine-based cement substitute via accelerated CO2 mineralisation in low-energy reactors, claiming a net negative footprint of –14.4kg CO2‑equivalent per tonne (cradle-to-gate) and storage of about 21kg CO2 per m³ of concrete at typical replacement rates. The material has moved from gramme-scale tests to an operational pilot in 18 months and has already been used in a Rotterdam quay wall grout by Hakkers, the 1917 Veerhuis restoration, and a 7m-span “carbon-neutral” concrete footbridge by Heijmans. Classified as CCUS, the process permanently binds captured industrial CO2 into stable carbonate minerals that remain locked in even after demolition, offering structural-grade, carbon-storing concrete mixes rather than purely low-embodied-carbon variants.

    Turning sawdust into fire‑resistant boards: design notes for materials engineers
    Materials
    5 days ago

    Turning sawdust into fire‑resistant boards: design notes for materials engineers

    Researchers at ETH Zurich and Empa have developed a recyclable sawdust–struvite composite board that is stronger in compression perpendicular to grain than spruce and shows cone calorimeter ignition times of 45 seconds, around three times longer than untreated timber. The material uses an enzyme from watermelon seeds to control crystallisation of struvite from newberyite, forming large crystals that infill voids between sawdust particles and act as an inorganic flame retardant, potentially matching cement‑bonded particleboard fire classes with only 40% binder by weight. Panels can be mechanically ground, heated to just over 100°C to release ammonia, and fully separated for reuse or as a phosphorus fertiliser, with future cost reductions possible by sourcing struvite from sewage treatment plant deposits.

    Atlas Copco hybrid generators: design, duty-cycling and CO₂ cuts for site engineers
    Materials
    6 days ago

    Atlas Copco hybrid generators: design, duty-cycling and CO₂ cuts for site engineers

    Atlas Copco has launched QHS integrated hybrid generators that combine battery storage and a diesel genset in a single canopy unit, capable of grid charging, self-charging via the engine, and optional solar panel input. The system automatically manages multiple energy sources to minimise engine runtime, claiming up to 80% fuel and CO₂ reductions and more than 95% less engine operating time versus diesel-only sets at low or variable loads. Rental-focused features include multiple socket configurations, external fuel connections, a terminal board and FleetLink telemetry for remote monitoring, diagnostics and fleet management.

    Related Industries & Products

    Construction

    Quality control software for construction companies with material testing, batch tracking, and compliance management.

    Mining

    Geotechnical software solutions for mining operations including CMRR analysis, hydrogeological testing, and data management.

    QCDB-io

    Comprehensive quality control database for manufacturing, tunnelling, and civil construction with UCS testing, PSD analysis, and grout mix design management.