Construction outcry grows over London ULEZ expansion

Grant Prior 1 year ago
Share

The Builders Merchants Federation is warning that Greater London could become a “no- go area” for many SME builders and other trades following the introduction of the expanded ULEZ zone in August.

The BMF has written to the Mayor of London voicing its fears and calling for a rethink as construction opposition continues to grow against the plans.

The Ultra-Low Emission Zone is set to be expanded on August 29, imposing a £12.50 daily charge on non-compliant vehicles across all London boroughs.

This means that anyone using a diesel van registered before September 2016 or petrol van registered before January 2006 will be charged to travel almost anywhere within the M25.

John Newcomb, BMF CEO said: “This is likely to impact SME tradespeople operating within the M25 as a significant proportion rely on non-compliant vehicles for their work. We can foresee a reluctance on their part to accept new work within the Greater London Boundary.

“This will have a knock-on effect for end customers, who will find it more difficult and costly to get work done. It will also affect sales turnover at merchant outlets within the new boundary, which will have consequences on the amounts of stock held and on their staffing levels.”

Lords Builders Merchants has 13 branches employing 300 staff operating across Greater London.

CEO, Shanker Patel, said: “We believe the introduction of the ULEZ extension will hurt the very people it is designed to assist. Transport for London should look to delay the introduction until such time as the current high level of inflation reduces, so those affected can afford to change their vehicles.”

Frank Elkins, Chief Operating Officer of Travis Perkins, said: “Although we fully appreciate the need to drive the impact of emissions down across the whole country, we are asking for more time for residents, tradespersons and workers to be able to adapt.”

Howard Luft, CEO of Selco, added: “The proposed ULEZ expansion will hurt the residents, workers and tradespeople of London alike, at a time when many are already experiencing great financial hardship with the current cost of living crisis in the UK.”

Latest news

OCU buys Scottish civils contractor RJ McLeod

Deal takes multi-utility infrastructure specialist revenue to over £800m
2 hours ago

£220m plan to restore secret wartime tunnels approved

Tunnels under High Holborn to become cultural exhibition space
1 hour ago

Student and resi developer Fortis goes under

Cheshire based developer follows construction arm into liquidation
6 hours ago

Construction output falls for third month running

Heavy rain and strong winds blamed for sharp fall in activity in April
5 hours ago

Plan in for Leeds 27-storey block of flats

390 flats planned at former Morgan Sindall office site
6 hours ago

Firms readied for £1.5bn Parliament estate upkeep deal

Invitation to tender due to go out next month
17 hours ago

Balfour wins design for £690m Skye transmission job

Main work contract for 137km power line to be awarded later this year
5 hours ago

Amey switches kit supplier

Deal with HSS was worth £24.5m a year to rental specialist
6 hours ago

Track workers scatter to avoid runaway rail trolley

Track trolley careers 1km towards work site
6 hours ago

Direct delivery model pays off as Murphy profit soars to £67m

Group operating margin jumps from 3% to 5% in record year
1 day ago

Ex-Galliard boss to lead Battersea next building phase

Don O’Sullivan joins as plans advance to start phase 3C of power station redevelopment
1 day ago

£100m Digbeth 33-storey flats job out to bid

483 flats will be delivered for Clarion housing association
1 day ago

Van Elle fined £233,000 after piling rig kills driver

Court hears how tragedy was caused by poorly maintained plant
1 day ago

Renew buys utilities contractor Excalon

Infrastructure giant expand into electricity transmission market with £26m deal
1 day ago

Planning for new homes plunges to record low

Home builders call for urgent action from incoming government
1 day ago

JTRE starts £400m 21-floor London tower scheme

Office block and 64 affordable homes to be built at 220 Blackfriars Road site
2 days ago

R G Carter construction profits up despite 24% revenue fall

Selective client choice help profit jump to £6m from £1m previously
2 days ago

Refurbs power London office work to record high

London Office Crane Survey office work starts exceed 4m sq ft for record third quarter
2 days ago

Knight Build owed money for work on UK’s poshest street

Contractor takes legal action over unpaid bills on new luxury flats complex
2 days ago

Winvic ranks top of May contracts league

Large residential scheme in Leeds caps strong haul of orders
2 days ago

Bid race starts for up £95m repairs to PFI hospital

Roseberry Park Hospital in Middlesbrough hit by serious defects
2 days ago

Building Safety changes slow down construction recovery

Confused market contains paradox of falling workload and contractors claiming they are too busy
2 days ago

Wates rejigs businesses as veteran leader retires

Wates Construction Group MD Paul Chandler to retire at end of year
6 days ago

Scaffolder dies from chemical burns

Tata Chemicals Europe fined £1.125m after death of Altrad scaffolder
5 days ago

M&E firms warn of persistent skills shortages

Shortage of adequately skilled workers blamed for slow growth
5 days ago

Southern Water names consultants for AMP8

Seven firms to share £240m in professional services spend
6 days ago

Construction buyers see momentum building

Contractors gearing-up for future growth as workloads and confidence rise
6 days ago

Bouygues bags £80m London NHS diagnostic centre job

New five-storey scanning facility to be built at West Middlesex University Hospital
6 days ago

London £3bn schools framework out to tender

SMEs allocated slots on London Construction Programme education framework refresh
6 days ago

Berkeley’s £270m Bath gas works scheme approved

House builder plans to build over 600 flats on banks of River Avon
6 days ago

Contractor services