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Local Economic Solutions for Sustainability
Extending Localisation
Introduction
Manufacturing
and resources
Food
Retail
and local centres
Energy
Finance
Overarching
issues
Next
steps
LWM
Home
Localise West Midlands
The Warehouse
54-57 Allison Street
Digbeth
Birmingham
B5 5TH
Tel: 0121 685 1155
Fax: 0121 643 3122
Email: info@localisewestmidlands.org.uk
Registered in England and Wales as a company limited
by guarantee (not for profit) no: 6239211
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Extending Localisation
- an exploratory report
Manufacturing and
resources
Negative
trends
- Internationally exposed: globalisation and increased transport has
moved many manufacturing jobs away from West Midlands and UK. Now less
than 15% of WM jobs, though still the highest of the UK regions.
- Upscaling of manufacturing often means reducing jobs to a single part
on a production line. Aside from job satisfaction, some business research
shows that a better product is created when workers are involved throughout
the process.
- Within the WM, there are fewer but larger manufacturing companies,
which are more centred on export and therefore only want to site near
motorway network and biggest cities. The 'just in time delivery' concept
results in unnecessary transit of goods.
- Business lobbies such as the Chamber of Commerce seem to accept and
encourage the outsourcing trend
- High-skilled/high tech jobs are moving too and may not be brought
back by high oil prices
- Short-lived trends make it difficult to provide trained workers; manufacturing
can move into new sectors before workers have the skills needed.
- A reduction in local entrepreneurship because small businesses are
more likely to fail.
- The distances goods travel reduce our resource efficiency: material
flows don't allow for returnable drinks bottles, for example.
- Repair industry is often unviable because goods manufactured in low-wage
countries are cheap, leading to depletion of raw materials.
Positive
trends, good practice and opportunities
- Resources available in the West Midlands: reclaimed materials from
local household and commercial waste; food crops; fuel crops; textile
crops (wool, linen, hemp); the byproducts of any existing production;
landfill gas, some minerals and aggregates.
- West Midlands public procurement, including the biggest local authority
in Europe (Birmingham) could be a major market for local manufacturing.
- High oil prices may bring return of 'heavy' products nearer to their
markets, with benefits to resource efficiency, climate change and local
multiplier. (Although prices have reduced at time of report release,
the long term trend is likely to be higher)
- Regional economic strategy supports low carbon products and services
which could boost localised production and supply chains.
- An Attwood Group snapshot of some WM regional manufacturers includes
38 manufacturing/mechanical engineering businesses from carpets to plastic
piping to buttons to bicycle assembly, many of whom are thriving.
- Black Country Housing Association had been buying 'sun pipes' from
overseas for housing and instead persuaded a local contractor to make
them in the Black Country, bringing £1/4 million and 60 jobs to
the local area and reducing transport.
- National Industrial Symbiosis Programme (NISP) - began in the WM,
making productive links between companies' material flows and logistics.
Makes CO2, financial and resource savings in reducing landfill, incineration
and transportation. Tends to work with larger businesses.
- The Distributed Economies (DE) model - developed by the International
Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics in Sweden - takes the
NISP approach further, networking SMEs to make use of local assets,
skills and markets to create a locally relevant economy. A scientific
approach to a sustainable model.
- Fair trade: some fair trade or co-operatively manufactured products
(textiles, gifts) are available so that West Midlands consumers can
support localisation benefits and fairer wages in developing countries,
but as a very small 'niche' activity.
Potential recommendations
- Public sector, third sector and business with social/environmental
objectives can play role in supporting positive local manufacturing
development.
- Role for economic development in identifying local needs and linking
with local assets and markets as per DE approach
- Evidence-based investigation of the impact on the region's manufacturing
of an inward investment and outsourcing centred approach to economic
development.
- See also local ownership and control recommendations of Finance section.
- Investigate how to encourage reuse of materials - using NISP; minimising
incineration, economic development interventions, policy changes, taxes
on raw materials.
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