A skills shortage is threatening the and residential pipelines in London and the south east of the UK, according to a report.
The report by the London Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) and KPMG says that, with 20% more workers needed for 拢96bn (鈧123bn) of projects between now and 2017, the UK capital and surrounding regions are facing a 鈥渕ajor skills crisis鈥.
House-building targets risk not being met, while the delivery of large infrastructure projects could be jeopardised, they said.
The shortage could impact the wider economy as early as April next year, when more than 600,000 workers will be needed to deliver major projects currently in planning, the 鈥楽kills to Build鈥 report said.
Richard Threlfall, KPMG UK head of infrastructure, building and construction, said that, for the 鈥渇irst time in many generations鈥, the UK had a strong pipeline of construction and infrastructure projects.
鈥淒elivery of that pipeline is now in jeopardy 鈥 not for lack of political will or funding 鈥 but for lack of a sufficiently large and trained workforce,鈥 Threlfall said.
鈥淯nless action is taken now, our housing targets will be missed, and infrastructure projects delayed.鈥
A 51% increase in training provision is needed to meet demand for skilled labour between 2014 and 2017 and plug a gap of nearly 15,000 people.
鈥淭his report calls on the industry itself to wake up and take responsibility to increase levels of training dramatically,鈥 Threlfall said.
Government and training providers, he added, needed to recognise that the UK construction industry was changing, with more application of technology and a trend towards offsite manufacturing.
鈥淭he skills required in the industry tomorrow will be very different from the skills required today,鈥 Threlfall added.
The residential sector is also facing a shortage, the report said, with 255,000 workers needed on site to deliver the 2015 pipeline of housing and 400,000 of the workforce expected to retire over the next 5-10 years.