Dulux proprietor Akzo Nobel has warned of a “huge shortage” of painters and interior decorators exacerbated by Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic because the group backs a start-up growing a paint robotic to ease the labour crunch.
The corporate’s UK head referred to as on the federal government to assist resolve employee shortages that he stated was creating “huge delays” within the development of latest buildings.
“Particularly within the UK, we see an enormous shortage of painters . . . We’re actually, actually involved,” stated José Antonio Jiménez Lozano.
“Covid, clearly, was enjoying a task in that as a result of some individuals switched their occupation . . . With Brexit, we have now additionally seen a discount of the individuals who have been coming from another European nations.”
Confronted with recruitment issues, Akzo has expanded past producing paints and began investing in know-how that it hopes will tackle the labour scarcity.
The Dutch group has acquired a minority stake in a French start-up, Les Companions, which has developed a robotic that may spray paint giant surfaces via a primarily automated course of.

The corporate has lately been demonstrating a prototype to clients within the UK. Antoine Rennuit, chief government of Les Companions, stated he anticipated accomplished merchandise to be out there subsequent 12 months.
However the robotic, considered one of a handful in growth by totally different corporations, is a way from reaching the capabilities of a human painter.
It’s at current restricted to engaged on flat floor and may spray paint as much as a peak of three.5 metres.
“I don’t suppose [the robot] will [become commonplace] as a result of, on the finish of the day, the portray and adorning job could be very [detailed],” stated Jiménez. “You continue to want a human contact.”
“There are a variety of obstacles” to creating the robotic sensible on a constructing website, stated one proprietor of a portray firm throughout an illustration at Akzo’s UK headquarters. But when these might be overcome, it will be useful to “depart it and set it to work” on an enormous development.
The know-how funding, nonetheless, might show useful for Akzo within the gentle of the labour shortages.
In line with a Dulux survey of 348 trade members this 12 months, 61 per cent of UK portray and adorning companies have been discovered to be struggling to search out employees with the required expertise.
Even earlier than Brexit, UK companies have been contending with an ageing workforce, with Akzo’s analysis suggesting at the very least 60 per cent of painters are greater than 50 years previous, Jiménez stated.
The labour scarcity additionally threatens to carry again the completion of constructions within the UK, which has lengthy been affected by a housing scarcity, and heighten stress on companies hit by inflation.
For Akzo, which final month suspended its revenue steerage for 2023, the employee issues are including to difficulties over China’s actual property disaster, which has hampered operations in considered one of its key markets.
“We’re doing all the things we will. [But] we’d like help from the authorities,” stated Jiménez, suggesting extra wanted to be accomplished to help apprentice programmes and make portray a horny occupation.
Requested if he would help a particular visa for painters, he stated the subject had been mentioned with the British Coatings Federation, an trade group, though the corporate has not formally referred to as for this.