Every person in the UK relies on around 5.8 tonnes of mineral products every year – enough to fill a large skip – according to the new Profile of the UK Mineral Products Industry – 2025 Edition, published by the Mineral Products Association (MPA).

The essential materials – from aggregates, concrete and asphalt to cement, lime and a range of other industrial minerals – form the foundation and fabric of the UK’s built environment, manufacturing base and transition to sustainable growth.
Mineral products are indispensable for the delivery of homes, buildings and infrastructure, and critical inputs to other industries including steel, glass, ceramics, paper, chemicals and food production.
In total, the industry supplied 397 million tonnes of mineral products in 2023, generating £6.7 billion in direct gross value added (GVA) and supporting further £253 billion of UK economic activity through its downstream supply chain – equivalent to around 11% of national GDP. The sector also supported 89,000 jobs directly and helped to sustain an estimated 3.4 million jobs in other industries.
“Mineral products are the foundation of the UK economy,” said Aurelie Delannoy, Director of Economic Affairs at the MPA. “Every home, road, hospital, factory – and even every wind turbine and solar panel – starts with these materials. As the UK transitions to a more sustainable, resilient and prosperous future, ensuring the long-term supply of these minerals is critical.”
The report warns that the availability of essential minerals is too often assumed rather than planned, highlighting the continuing decline in permitted reserves of construction aggregates. This trend poses risks to future supply and, in turn, to the delivery of infrastructure, housing and Net Zero goals.
Also highlighted is the industry’s substantial contribution to sustainability, including:
63% reduction in CO₂ emissions from UK cement and concrete production since 1990.
31% of construction aggregates now sourced from recycled or secondary materials – among the highest rates in Europe.
50 years of high-quality quarry restoration, creating over 8,000 hectares of new priority habitats and supporting nature recovery.
Delannoy added:
“The minerals underpinning our sector are abundant in the ground, but they need planning, permitting and managing, and should never be taken for granted. Our industry continues to invest in decarbonisation and resource recovery, and has been delivering Biodiversity Net Gain for decades before it became national policy. To be able to sustain the UK’s future growth depends on securing a long-term supply of domestically-sourced essential materials.”
The Profile of the UK Mineral Products Industry – Edition 2025 provides the most comprehensive overview of the materials, markets, and sustainability performance of an industry that quite literally forms the foundation of the UK economy. Click here to download
Owen Mace has taken over as Director of the British Plastics Federation (BPF) Plastic Pipes Group on the retirement of Caroline Ayres. He was previously Standards and Technical Manager for the group.
Amiblu, a global leader in Glass Reinforced Plastic (GRP) pipe systems for wastewater, stormwater, drinking water, irrigation, hydropower, and industrial applications, has announced the appointment of Martyn Turton as its Sales Director for the UK & Ireland, driving strategic market development in the infrastructure and water sectors, effective immediately.

Hear how United Utilities is accelerating its investment to reduce spills from storm overflows across the Northwest.