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Quarry operative

  • Hours

    37-40 per week

  • Starting salary

    £12,000 + per year



The work

As a quarry operative you would excavate rock and minerals from quarries or opencast mines, before processing them to make products for industry such as:

  • limestone for cement production
  • rock chippings, sand and gravel (known as 'aggregates') for construction and road building
  • clay for brick-making
  • slate for roofing.

Your duties would include:

  • working with heavy plant machinery such as excavators, draglines and cranes
  • operating processing equipment like rock crushers and stone graders
  • setting up and using drilling equipment
  • carrying out maintenance on vehicles and machinery
  • setting and detonating explosives, known as 'shotfiring'
  • transporting materials with large tipper and dumper trucks.

Hours

You could expect to work around 37 to 40 hours a week, usually on a shift system. Overtime may be available.

The job is physically demanding and some tasks could be dangerous. Your employer would normally provide you with protective clothing.

You may have to travel some distance to work every day as quarry sites are usually in rural areas.


Income

  • Trainee operatives can earn around £12,000 a year
  • With experience, this can rise to between £17,000 and £23,000
  • Operatives with supervisory duties can earn up to £28,000 a year.

Overtime, shift pay and bonuses may increase these amounts.

Figures are intended as a guideline only.


Entry requirements

You don't usually need qualifications to find work as a quarry operative, but some experience of construction, mining or mobile plant machinery operation could be useful when looking for a job.

A relevant driving licence, for example LGV or plant operators licence, may also give you an advantage.

You may be able to get into this job through an Apprenticeship scheme with a construction company or quarrying firm. The range of Apprenticeships available in your area will depend on the local jobs market and the types of skills employers need from their workers. To find out more about Apprenticeships, visit the Apprenticeships website.

For more details about working in the quarrying industry, see the Careers in Quarrying website.


Training and development

Once you are working, you could take work-based qualifications from the Mineral Products Qualifications Council (MPQC).

The exact qualification you took would depend on your level of responsibility, but could include:

  • Level 3 Certificate and Diploma in the Extractives and Mineral Processing Industries
  • NVQ Certificate in Processing Operations for the Extractive and Minerals Processing Industries
  • NVQ Diploma in Complex Processing Operations for the Extractive and Minerals Processing Industries.

Visit the MPQC website (Skills Centre section) for a list of approved training centres offering the above qualifications, plus specialised short training courses, such as risk assessment and hazards, safety passport, quarry regulations and competency schemes.


Skills and knowledge

  • a good level of fitness
  • an understanding of safe working practices
  • practical skills, especially for working with machinery
  • the ability to work as part of a team
  • the ability to follow spoken and written instructions
  • good maths skills to work out quantities of materials.

More information

Proskills UK (Opens new window)
www.proskills.co.uk

Mineral Products Qualifications Council (Opens new window)
7 Regent Street
Nottingham
NG1 5BS
www.epicltd.com

Careers in Quarrying (Opens new window)
www.careersinquarrying.co.uk


Opportunities

You can find a list of potential employers in the contacts section of the Mineral Products Association website.

There are also a limited number of jobs on coastal dredgers, mainly working along the east and south-east coasts and in the Bristol Channel. These supply sand and gravel to the construction industry.

With experience, you could progress to jobs in supervisory management, health and safety inspection, machine and plant maintenance, laboratory work testing site samples, or quality control.

Job profiles are based on the latest information supplied to us by industry bodies, such as Sector Skills Councils. Please be aware that with the introduction of the Qualifications and Credit Framework (Opens in a new window) there has been, and will continue to be, changes to vocational qualifications. For more information, please check with industry bodies directly.

We do not accept responsibility for the content of external sites.


Related industry information

Industry summary

The extractive and mineral process industry is part of the process manufacturing sector, represented by Proskills Sector Skills Council. This sector also includes the following industries: building products; coatings; furniture, furnishing and interiors; glass and related industries; ceramics; paper; plus print and printed packaging. In addition, there are several industries that are aligned with Proskills industries, including: glazing and window manufacture; soft furnishings; design; paper merchants; and mining services. The sector as a whole currently employs an estimated 810,000 people in around 76,900 workplaces. Since 1998, there has been a steady decline in the numbers employed in the sector as a whole and the number of workplaces, but productivity in the sector has continued to increase over the same period. Overall, the sector will need to recruit almost 93,000 people up to 2017 to replace those retiring or leaving the sector.

The UK extractive and mineral process industry provides the essential raw materials for use by the construction industry, agricultural, manufacturing and by the energy production industry. This industry covers:

  • Deep coal mines and opencast coal working
  • Mining and agglomeration of lignite
  • Extraction and agglomeration of peat
  • Manufacture of solid fuel
  • Mining of iron ore, uranium, thorium, and other non‐ferrous metal ores
  • Quarrying of ornamental and building stone, limestone, gypsum, chalk and slate
  • Operation of gravel and sand pits
  • Mining of clays, kaolin, chemical and fertiliser minerals
  • Production of salt
  • Manufacture of cement, lime, plaster, ready‐mixed concrete, and mortars
  • Cutting, shaping and finishing of ornamental an building stone
  • Other mining and quarrying activities

Key facts:

  • There are an estimated 86,000 people employed in the industry, across 10,000 workplaces.
  • Workers in the industry tend to be full‐time and directly employed, rather than on a contract basis.
  • Work is often shift‐based, especially in lower levels jobs.
  • 18% of the workforce has a Level 1 or entry level qualification, 25% a Level 2, 23% a Level 3, 6% a Level 4 and 19% a Level 5 qualification.
  • Annual turnover for the industry is currently around £9 billion.
  • There are 2,741 sole traders in the industry.

Jobs in the industry range from: shot firer, weighbridge operator, road builder, goods vehicle driver, trainee engineer, miner, sea person, logistics manager, processing plant manager, geologist, estate manager, quarry manager.


National and regional data

East Midlands – There are an estimated 8,500 employees in the regional workforce, in around 960 workplaces.

East of England – There are an estimated 2,800 employees in the regional workforce, in around 960 workplaces. There are very few sites in the East of England.

London – There are an estimated 17,000 employees in the regional workforce, in around 510 workplaces.

North East – There are an estimated 2,100 employees in the regional workforce, in around 380 workplaces.

North West – There are an estimated 8,500 employees in the regional workforce, in around 920 workplaces.

South East – There are an estimated 7,100 employees in the regional workforce, in around 1,120 workplaces.

South West – There are an estimated 10,700 employees in the regional workforce, in around 1,280 workplaces.

West Midlands – There are an estimated 7,100 employees in the regional workforce, in around 960 workplaces.

Yorkshire and the Humber – There are an estimated 7,100 employees in the regional workforce, in around 970 workplaces.

Northern Ireland – There are an estimated 4,000 employees in the regional workforce, in around 400 workplaces.

Scotland – There are an estimated 6,000 employees in the regional workforce, in around 1,100 workplaces.

Wales – There are an estimated 5,000 employees in the regional workforce, in around 700 workplaces.


Career paths


Further sources


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