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28 January 2026

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Plant hire bosses blame Labour government for crane strikes

44 minutes Tower crane operator strikes expose the ‘perfect storm’ created by government policy, plant-hire companies are saying.

Around 100 tower crane operators working for Wolffkran have begun a series of strikes this week
Around 100 tower crane operators working for Wolffkran have begun a series of strikes this week

The 色猫直播 Plant-hire Association (CPA) is blaming the latest round of strikes by crane operators at Wolffkran UK on the government.

The CPA, whose members include some of the UK鈥檚 largest tower crane rental firms, said that government policy failures have created a perfect storm of weak demand, rising costs and escalating industrial disputes.

It said that the dispute is driven by falling workloads and higher employment costs, which have stripped employers of the capacity to meet further pay demands.

Data from construction analysts Glenigan underlines the scale of the slowdown, with the total value of projects starting on site falling by around 20% in 2025, while civil engineering activity dropped 56% year-on-year. Main contract awards fell 11%, while planning approvals are at record lows, leaving a fragile and uncertain pipeline for 2026.

That collapse in activity has translated directly into poor utilisation across plant fleets. Employers faced prolonged periods of low demand throughout 2025 as projects delayed from 2024 and 2025 failed to materialise, exacerbated by regulatory uncertainty and the mishandling of Gateway 2 approvals for high-rise residential buildings by the Building Safety Regulator.

At the same time, firms have absorbed sharp increases in employer national insurance and the minimum wage, pushing up baseline employment costs just as revenues have been falling. Subdued demand has also allowed clients to force down hire rates amid oversupply, further squeezing margins, the CPA said.

Wolffkran said that average crane utilisation had fallen 26% since 2016, the number of cranes on hire has dropped by around 40%, and average rental rates have declined by 20-25%, leaving little headroom for further cost increases.

CPA chief executive Steve Mulholland said: 鈥淭his dispute is the product of a perfect storm created by Labour. 色猫直播 activity collapsed throughout 2025, yet employers were hit with higher national insurance, higher minimum wages and growing regulatory burdens at exactly the same time.

Plant-hire firms stood by their workforce through long periods of poor utilisation, but cash has been draining out of the sector for over a year. Highly skilled operators understandably want to protect pay differentials, but those expectations are colliding with the reality of a market where work has dried up and hire rates are being pushed down.

鈥淭he government鈥檚 continued support for a big-state, high-tax approach is exacerbating the problem. Employers cannot give in to unrealistic demands when policy decisions have stripped work out of the market and driven costs up simultaneously.

鈥淚f Labour is serious about delivering 1.5 million new homes, it must start creating a stable, pro-investment environment by unblocking delayed projects, fixing regulatory bottlenecks, and easing the tax burden on employment. Without that, these disputes will keep happening and delivery will fall further behind.鈥

The CPA warned that unless confidence is restored and investment unlocked, industrial relations across construction would continue to deteriorate, undermining the supply chain needed to deliver homes, infrastructure and economic growth.

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