As the final market, construction has always been one of the largest consumers of plastics and polymer composites. The application range is very wide, from roofs, decks, wall panels, fences and insulation materials to pipes, floors, solar panels, doors and windows and so on.
A 2018 market study by Grand View Research valued the global sector at $102.2 billion in 2017 and projected it would grow at a compounded annual growth rate of 7.3 percent to 2025. PlasticsEurope, meanwhile, has estimated that the sector in Europe consumes about 10 million metric tons of plastics each year, or about one-fifth of the total plastics used in the region.
Recent U.S. Census Bureau data indicate that U.S. private residential construction has been rebounding since last summer, after slumping from March to May as the economy slowed due to the pandemic. The uptick continued throughout 2020 and, by December, private residential construction spending was up by 21.5 percent from December 2019. The U.S. housing market — bolstered by low mortgage interest rates — is projected to continue growing this year, according to the National Association of Home Builders, but at a slower rate than last year.
Regardless, it remains a huge market for plastic products. In construction, applications tend to value durability and have a long lifespan, sometimes remaining in use for several years, if not decades. Think PVC windows, siding or flooring, or polyethylene water pipes and the like. But still, sustainability is front and center for companies developing new products for this market. The aim is both to minimize waste during production, and to incorporate more recycled content into products such as roofing and decking.


Post time: Mar-30-2021