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UK Manufacturers Divided on Capacity to Meet Sovereign Push, Survey

April 20 (Reuters) - British manufacturers give a patchy picture of their ability to ramp up output should the government need to ​mobilise key industries, a survey showed on Monday.

Britain ‌is redoubling efforts to restore domestic industrial capacity in sectors deemed strategically critical - from defence to energy - as it seeks to reduce dependence ​on foreign supply chains laid bare by the war ​in Iran.

The survey from the Manufacturing Technologies Association, ⁠a trade body, showed many manufacturers would face financial and ​capacity constrains, as well as long lead times, in any ​government push to raise sovereign capacity quickly.

• 38% of manufacturers surveyed said they could ramp up capacity within 0-3 months, and a further ​18% said it would take 3-6 months

• More than ​a quarter of respondents said they had no desire to support a ‌need ⁠to boost sovereign manufacturing capacity

• 29% said they would be unable to add capacity if asked, and 24% said they could add up to 15%, while 12% said they ​could add more ​than 50% ⁠of capacity

• Access to funding was the top-ranked barrier to raising capacity, followed by lack ​of space

• 55% of companies said the ​government's industrial ⁠strategy had made no impact on their company and they could not see any way that it could in future

• ⁠The ​survey of 358 manufacturers - comprising 50% ​small, 28% and medium and 22% large companies - took place between March 11 ​and April 6

Reporting by Andy Bruce; editing by Suban Abdulla

Source: Reuters


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