Thanks,
I see your tank (Nice !) is in 15 mm glass
The price I was quoted was 4 times that of 12 mm and only marginally cheaper than 19 mm
is this a local pricing issue or inline with prices in the southern hemisphere?
I don't make glass, but I work in a production process and understand it's costing issues.
At 'standard' thickness (which is to say common glass thickness), the actual cost should be the setup cost, plus the cost of materials and conversion plus markup. At similar, common sizes, 15mm glass is 25% more material than 12mm glass, so it should be similar to cost of 12mm plus 25% unless other factors prevail.
Non standard lengths and widths are hard to estimate because we don't know what dies or special process the manufacturer has to use or what his setup costs are. If for example, he only makes 12mm, then setting up for one person to make 15mm or 19mm may be very expensive. If he doesn't have the equipment or skilled employees to make thicker glass, he may need to have a third party make it. If his process is less efficient for thicker glass, he may need to charge more for waste.
I'd shop around for another supplier as in the states, I examined one tank maker and found that prices are stable (roughly flat) from 8mm to 24mm glass. [This does not mean that it's the same price, but that the cost per pound of finished glass is almost the same. Glass which is twice as thick will cost twice as much. Glass which is three times as long will cost three times as much. You can determine this from the volume of the glass produced, L x W x H x thickness.] Despite not being a glass maker, this means that the process for 8-24mm glass is such that actual cost varies only by the amount of material with the 'standard' lengths and heights.
In short, for that particular tank maker, he was able to produce glass within those widths (8mm to 24mm) and at standard lengths with price increasing directly proportional to the quantity of materials used. 50% more material = 50% more cost, 200% more material = 200% more cost, etc.