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Economic Development

Exodus of EU workers compounds construction labour shortage

Plymouth's Greenlight Safety and Training is inundated with firms needing apprentices as construction boom and staff dearth coincide

Plymouth's Greenlight Safety and Training says dozens of South West construction firms are in need of apprentices

A Plymouth’s construction boom has led to huge demand for apprentices as firms face a shortage of labour - partly due to Brexit.

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ construction sector has lost 46% of its skilled EU workers, according to University of Oxford research, and this skills shortage has been compounded by an ageing population and the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In Plymouth, where several large infrastructure projects are currently underway, there is growing demand for construction staff, including apprentices needed to form the next generation of workers.

Plymouth firm , which runs training schemes for construction companies and trains apprentices, said it is experiencing an “incredible boom in construction industry apprenticeship take ups from Plymouth companies”.

There has been a shortage of construction workers in the South West

In December 93 employers contacted it needing apprentices to start between January and April 2021 and a further five firms, needing 10 apprentices between them, came forward in the first weeks of the new year.

The firm began trading as a safety and training consultancy in 2009 and has a large number of clients in the construction industry giving it a solid insight into the marketplace.

Harvey Smith, commercial manager at the Roborough-based business, said: “The industry is extremely resilient. In the South West the volume of work coming through the pipeline is massive, and then there are projects that are currently running.”

Dan Symons, director and owner of Greenlight Safety and Training, added: “It (the construction industry) would be doing well for any time period. Since July 2020 it has been really busy. In November we thought there would be a downturn, because of the lockdown, but that didn’t happen, and if anything it seems more busy.”