The latest report from Barbour ABI reveals that more than £7bn worth of contracts for construction were awarded in February, with a pipeline of £12.4bn worth of planning applications given ‘green light’

The residential market continued a steady recovery, with £2.3bn of contracts for construction awarded in February.

The hospitality and leisure sector dominated in February

However, the hospitality and leisure sector boomed in February, with more than £1bn of contracts for construction awarded for the first time since March 2021.

The £600m construction contract for the One Berkeley Street Hotel in London was the single largest contract and the first mega-sized hotel project in almost a year.

Barbour’s report also looked at planning approvals, and the future of construction in the UK showed clear growth. Following a slow month in January, February saw more than £12bn worth of planning applications given the green light.

Infrastructure projects saw the biggest activity in the month, with applications for £5bn worth of projects approved.

This is the highest figure recorded for infrastructure projects since November 2016 and is driven by the increased demand for renewable power sources.

The single largest project is the Norfolk Vanguard offshore wind farm, which is valued at £2.7bn, but there are also several other major projects, including battery storage facilities, solar farms, and onshore wind farms.

The residential sector also performed well in terms of planning approvals, with £3.8bn worth of requests given the go ahead. This figure is higher than the £3.5bn monthly average seen in 2021 and shows the continuing robustness of the residential housing sector.

Large scale projects at the University of Portsmouth and a high school in Fife made for a good month for education projects with planning applications worth £500m approved.

Planning applications show £9.5bn worth of projects proposed in January. The bulk of this is down to residential applications, which totalled £4.6bn but once again applications for renewable power facilities gave a boost to the applications in the infrastructure sector, with proposals for £1.9bn worth of projects lodged.

A solar farm in Yorkshire with a value of £125m and a wind farm in Scotland valued at £120m are two notable examples.

Recent events in Ukraine show future product shortage forecasts

Tom Hall, chief economist at Barbour ABI, commented: “The planning environment continued to go from strength to strength in February as sentiment moved in line with the improving Covid-19 situation.

“Contract awards continued on their record run over the last 6 months or so, with the most impacted sector of hospitality and leisure starting to show signs of life.

“The race to renewable energy generation is also fuelling considerable growth in related infrastructure construction projects; we can be confident that this is a trend that will continue for some time.

“While the outlook is not uniform across industry sectors or across the country, the results from February are encouraging and give us confidence that 2022 should be a good year for the construction industry as these projects in the planning pipeline turn into output.

“The demand for new buildings and facilities along with the willingness to invest in such projects is a very positive sign. However there remain several risks that may disrupt the commercially sensitive sectors recoveries: a record tax burden, high debt and rising inflation for consumers, further Brexit-related trade barriers coming into force, and recent events in Ukraine causing further product shortages and inflation as well as increasing geopolitical instability.”

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