UK leather industry environment spending up, employment down

12/09/2003

Environmental spending in the UK textile and leather industries increased 15.3% between 2000 and 2001, a new survey has found. The figures were recorded against the backdrop of a hefty 8% decrease on environmental spending within UK manufacturing as a whole.

 

Published by DEFRA consultants URS, the annual Environmental Protection Expenditure by Industry Survey for 2001 found that environmental spending during the year in textiles and leather production totaled £120 million ($192 million).  The figure represents around 0.8% of turnover of the companies that responded and an average of £600 per employee. In 2000, spending amounted to £102 million, equivalent to 0.6% of turnover or £400 per employee.

 

Within the leather products sector including footwear and finished leather, environmental spending rose nearly three-fold from £12 million to £33 million  (0.7% of turnover to 1.9%).  This was on a total sector turnover of £1.65 billion.  Expenditure per employee also shot up, from £550 to £1,850, though this was partly a reflection of the steep decline in employee numbers over the 12 month period from 27,000 to 24,206 (down to 16,100 by March 2003). The figures were recorded against a massive 21% fall in spending on environmental capital equipment within industry as a whole.