ABOUT THE INDUSTRY
Tuesday, 02, Dec 2008 01:07
Aggregates are among the very essentials of life - as important to us in their own way as the food from our farms.
Through their products, quarries give us places to live, places to work, places to play and much more. They literally underpin our society.
Quarrying does, however, have environmental implications.
Recognising this, the UK industry aims to adopt a responsible approach to its work and a considerate attitude to its neighbours.
It is easy to regard a quarry as a hole in the ground. It takes a bit more imagination to appreciate that many of the good things of life come out of that hole.
In a typical year, the UK’s quarry network supports:
the building of 180,000 new homes
£1.6 billion on school and university improvements
a £1.15 billion hospital building programme
maintenance of our 230,000-mile road and 10,000-mile rail networks
a £1.7 billion programme of improvements to water services
the continuing upgrading of UK airports
supplies of special sands for glass foundry and other industries
cleansing of emissions from coal-fired power stations
the construction of lottery-supported arts and community projects
In addition.....
every year nearly four tonnes of aggregates are needed per head of the population in the UK.
a typical family indirectly demands a lorry load of aggregates each year
a new house requires some 50 tonnes of aggregates
the quarrying industry employs around 38,000 people directly and even more indirectly
Although our aggregate consumption per head of the population is lower than that of most of our European neighbours, quarrying is a major industry.
There are around 1,300 quarries in the UK producing £3 billion worth of products a year. The construction industry, which contributes around ten per cent of the nation’s gross domestic product, is totally reliant on quarrying.
Demand for aggregates, which peaked at some 300 million tonnes a year in 1989, has now settled at around 210 million tonnes. The industry has committed itself to minimising the call on primary aggregates and is investing heavily in facilities which will maximise the proportion of recycled and secondary aggregates.
Quarrying provides nearly 40,000 jobs directly and even more indirectly through the industry’s spending on services. Many of these jobs are in rural areas where other employment opportunities can be scarce.
Many products we take for granted – from paper to glass, cosmetics to toothpaste – are manufactured using materials derived from quarrying.