News feeds Mobile apps Need help?

Report

The European Equipment Rental Industry Report

The European Rental Association has published its first market statistics report of the construction equipment rental market in Europe.

  • Genre: Report
  • Sector: Rental
  • Published: April 2009
  • No. pages:
  • Price: £800.00€900.00

The report has been the work of the ERA’s Statistics Committee in collaboration with IHS Global Insight, the global economic and financial analysis company.

History
A recent ERA evaluation concluded that there is very little data in the rental market and that it was critical to research key overall data for the European market. This research is now publicly available.

Report Contents
For each country, the following detailed information is published:
The total rental revenue
The number of rental locations
The number of employees
The number of companies
Penetration: Sales of Equipment (to the rental industry versus total sales)
Penetration: Equipment Population (value of equipment in rental market versus total equipment market value)
Penetration: Rental versus Construction

For product types, data is presented in an aggregated form for each national and European market.

Methodology
The Report has gathered data from national statistical offices, industry reports and results from its own survey. Data has been gathered from twelve European countries covering thirteen product types.
Countries include: Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the UK.
Product types include: Earthmoving equipment, concrete related equipment, compaction equipment, energy (e.g. generators, compressors), pumps, material handling equipment, aerial work platforms, cranes, scaffolding, shoring, traffic safety, accommodation, hand tools.

Pricing
Pricing:
ERA Members: €300
ERA Non-Members: €900

Bookmark and Share

People who bought this report were also interested in...



KHL FREE Newsletter Sign-Up

World Construction Week
World Crane Week

World Demolition
World Access Week

Featured Report

Comment

After years of extensive research, consultation and negotiation with industry experts, this long overdue rule will address the leading causes of fatalities related to cranes and derricks, including electrocution, boom collapse and overturning.

Imported from [no caption]US Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis

Read more here