January 10, 2012

Canadian construction will have steady work flow in 2012: report

TORONTO
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Diversification and continued strong investment in the transportation, energy, mining and healthcare sectors will help keep construction workloads steady with low escalation in 2012, according to BTY Group's annual Market Intelligence Report on construction costs across Canada.

"Even with lower than expected growth in the U.S., worries over European bailouts and slower growth in residential construction in most of the country, we expect reasonably healthy levels of activity across Canada," said Joe Rekab, Managing Partner at BTY Group.

“The story for 2012 is that strong energy, resource and infrastructure investment should balance a cooling housing market in almost every province, with the exception of British Columbia and Alberta both of which will see gains in the housing market over the previous year."

BTY’s report noted the following construction highlights:

•In Ontario, an ambitious horizontal and vertical infrastructure program will lead, but concerns over deficit spending could put some projects on hold.

•Oilsands investments of $24 billion in 2011 will fuel Alberta's industry, and drive Canada's strongest residential growth.

•New multibillion-dollar mining projects and on-going energy healthcare and transportation projects will keep Quebec busy.

•More than $10 billion in new potash projects will boost construction in Saskatchewan.

•B.C. will see both strong residential activity and increase private sector investment in non-residential construction.

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