Global construction output is expected to grow by 42% by 2030, driven largely by government stimuli - report
With the infrastructure boom set to fuel global economic growth over the next decade, the construction industry must address the mounting pressures associated with climate change and the race to net zero greenhouse gas emissions (net zero).
This is according the Future of Construction: A Global Forecast for Construction to 2030, written with Oxford Economics and published by Marsh and Guy Carpenter.
The report provides a view on the future of construction as the industry recovers from the unprecedented effects of COVID-19 and the key drivers shaping its future over the next decade.
Richard Gurney, global head of Construction, Marsh Specialty, commented: “Climate change and the ESG agenda – and the risks and opportunities they present – are among the biggest challenges the global construction industry faces over the next decade. These forces are changing risk profiles for the sector.
”Organisations must adapt in order to harness the sector’s massive potential for growth while playing a pivotal role in the advancement of economies and communities around the world.”
According to the report, global construction output is expected to grow by 6.6% in 2021 and by 42% by 2030, driven largely by government stimuli and the demand for residential construction.
As the sector grows, however, so too does the risk of greater pollution and waste, it warns. Construction and the wider built environment currently accounts for around 40% of the world’s global greenhouse gas emissions.
Climate change and the race to net zero are arguably the greatest challenges that face the construction industry. The need to radically reduce the amount of carbon embedded in new construction will drive the growth of a deconstruction industry that reuses huge existing urban stockpiles of construction materials.
The reports states that in 2020, environmental, social, and governance (ESG)-related capital for infrastructure grew 28%, which was largely due to a flow of fundraising into sustainability-related strategies.
Given that significant equity is usually allocated to infrastructure by major construction companies and developers using their own corporate balance sheets, opportunities exist for those companies that develop new technologies, designs, and processes.
Other projections for the industry to 2030 include:
- Predicted average annual growth in construction of 3.6% per annum – faster than either the services or manufacturing sectors.
- The next decade for construction will see global growth up by 35% compared to the previous decade, driven by unprecedented levels of stimulus spending on infrastructure and the unleashing of excess household savings; it will represent more than 10% of GDP in North America.
- Global infrastructure construction is forecast to grow by an annual average of 5.1%.
- Annual growth in UK infrastructure is expected to average 3.7%, rivaling China over the period as UK mega projects provide heightened growth.
Graham Robinson, global infrastructure and construction lead at Oxford Economics and lead author of the report, said: “It is unusual to see construction outstripping growth in both services and manufacturing over a more sustained period. We would normally expect to see construction growing faster than other sectors of the economy for shorter periods in a cyclical upturn.
”However, it’s not surprising that construction is expected to power the global economy over this next decade, considering the unprecedented nature of the stimulus spending on infrastructure by governments and the unleashing of excess household savings in the wake of COVID.”
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