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Is an Expansion of Guyana’s Clay Brick Industry Still Viable? (Redirected)

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This article has been migrated to: Editorial: Reviving Guyana’s Clay Brick Industry on the Guyana, South America Official Website.

18th of October, 2021. Guyana, South America

Last updated: December 19, 2022 at 8:02 am

The question as to why Guyana stopped (predominantly) utilizing clay bricks in construction is hard to answer. But I have a feeling that it has something to do with the economic mismanagement that led to the downward spiral of the country’s economy that started right after Independence in 1966 – when Guyanese politicians first started dividing Guyanese on the basis of race and class.

Clay bricks are widely produced and utilized in the hinterland regions of Guyana where it is the material of choice for construction of homes. It is cheaper, more durable, and more aesthetically appealing than cement blocks. In colonial days, this locally produced construction material had been the building blocks of the vast majority of concrete structures. So why then were clay bricks sidelined in favor of the inferior cement blocks made from imported cement? And why are the heavy lifters in Guyana’s construction industries preferring cement blocks over clay bricks?

The whole scenario reeks of an unpatriotic spirit, a “don’t care a damn” attitude, and a sell-off to Trinidad Companies which keep pushing cement and by extension, cement blocks, on the Guyanese market – with little to no thought of how this would weaken the Guyanese economy (and infrastructure as well), and the thousands of unemployed Guyanese who can easily make a healthy living while strengthening Guyana’s economy (and infrastructure) through clay brick production right here in Guyana.

What consistently seems to elude the government of the day in Guyana is the merits and benefits of utilizing clay bricks instead of concrete blocks in construction across the country. The more we make use of our natural, God-given resources, the richer Guyana becomes since this will cause our country’s GDP to go up. If Guyana produces more clay bricks instead of buying cement blocks, more local people will be employed and more money gets circulated into Guyana’s economy.

In the year 2019, a Chronicle News Article reported that clay bricks purchased from the North Rupununi reduced the construction cost of low-income homes by 25%, and that the Central and Housing Planning Authority was at that time exploring the possibility of utilizing clay bricks more extensively.

“The houses built with the bricks are much cheaper and we recognize that. For example, if we are looking at the starter homes constructed that are 400 square feet, using the concrete blocks the building would cost us around $4 million but using the clay blocks it costs us about $3 million, you can see that it’s much cheaper,” Saul explained.

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The clay brick project does not have its merits in boycotting Trinidadian industries, nor does it seek to blow cement and cement blocks completely out of the water. But what it will do though, is give the cement block a good run for its money on the basis of the superiority of clay bricks over cement blocks, and the fact that producing them locally will strengthen Guyana’s economy.

It is important to note that there are some things we as a country can produce and some we can’t. No country can thrive without imports – especially not a small country like Guyana. You’ve heard the saying that “no man is an island.” On the same note, “no country is a planet.” We all rely on each other, and what we can’t produce we must import. Imports and exports make the world go ’round.

On the other hand, there are some things we can produce cheaply in our own country, and which we have the competitive edge to produce. And one of these is clay bricks.

Here are some fun facts about clay bricks:

  • They are stronger.
  • They last longer.
  • They reduce construction costs (in Guyana)
  • They’re more beautiful than cement blocks.
  • They strengthen Guyana’s economy.
  • They utilize Guyana’s natural resources.

In addition, machines can be sourced from China which can be run on solar energy and churn out hundreds of clay-bricks per minute.

In light of all of the above, it would clearly be beneficial to the people of Guyana if the Government of Guyana gives more financial and marketing support to Guyanese seeking to develop the country’s potentially vast and wildly profitable clay bricks industry.

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