Coatings industry offers government its all-seeing eye on manufacturing decline

Pigment & Resin Technology

ISSN: 0369-9420

Article publication date: 1 April 2003

45

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Citation

(2003), "Coatings industry offers government its all-seeing eye on manufacturing decline", Pigment & Resin Technology, Vol. 32 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/prt.2003.12932baf.002

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited


Coatings industry offers government its all-seeing eye on manufacturing decline

Coatings industry offers government its all-seeing eye on manufacturing decline

Keywords: Coatings, Manufacturing, Industry

Evidence of the seriousness of the decline in UK manufacturing was published today by the British Coatings Federation (BCF) which represents the UK paints, coatings and printing ink manufacturers, a £2.5 billion industry which supplies a broad range of different manufacturing sectors and as such is a bellwether for much of the rest of British industry.

The BCF’s President, Mr Peter Rieck has written to Patricia Hewitt at the Department of Trade and Industry asking for official recognition of the critical state of UK manufacturing and calling for appropriate and urgent action to be taken.

The Federation reports that the situation is most severe in the industrial coatings sector where sales have been falling at an annual rate of 10 per cent with the latest (June) figures showing 17th consecutive monthly decrease.

Worst hit are general industrial coatings (e.g. for constructional steelwork, machinery, bridges, buildings, etc.), wood finishes for the furniture industry and printing inks where colour inks for newspaper advertising have fallen for the first time ever.

Profits continue to fall with 40 per cent of firms in the industrial coatings sector now trading unprofitably, with 80 per cent of all participants in a recent survey reporting lower gross margins than a year ago. Employee numbers fell 5 per cent last year, the largest decrease since 1996, while new investment is 20 per cent down.

Production of coatings for automotive manufacture is now a much reduced activity in the UK with two of the three major coating firms already having closed production, instead of importing products from plants in continental Europe to supply the UK market. Many vehicle components are also imported ready-coated.

In addition to declining sales, the BCF cites increasing labour costs, energy and other environmental taxes and the disproportionate burden of EU legislation as enacted and enforced in the UK, as serious threats to UK competitiveness.

The action plan for Government outlined by the BCF includes:

  • reduction of the legislative load,

  • extending eligibility to Part B processes for entry into Climate Change Levy Agreements,

  • twelve month delay in implementing costly forthcoming EU labelling laws, and

  • introduction of smaller industry direct support to encourage investment in R&D and environmental schemes

For further information, please contact: Mrs Moira McMillan, Chief Executive, British Coatings Federation Ltd. Tel: 01372 360660; Fax: 01372 376069; E-mail: moira.mcmillan@bcf.co.uk; Web site: www.coatings.org.uk

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