Otago Daily Times

‘‘DISASTROUS’’ EFFECT

- JACOB MCSWEENY jacob.mcsweeny@odt.co.nz

THE closure of the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter is ‘‘disastrous’’ for engineerin­g in the South and it will send shockwaves through the sector.

Southland Otago Regional Engineerin­g Collective [SOREC] chairman Gareth Evans said he was surprised at how soon the smelter would close — August 2021.

‘‘Twelve months doesn’t give the . . . businesses affected very much time at all to adjust.

‘‘It’s going to fly by, it’s going to feel really fast and . . . there’s going to be a lot of hurt through it.’’

The closure would have implicatio­ns for the wider engineerin­g sector, Mr Evans said.

‘‘You’re taking one of the largest consumers of engineerin­g services out of the Southland and Otago region.

‘‘It’s going to mean that some engineerin­g companies and some supporting companies are going to end up leaving the industry if they’re too dependent on the smelter.

‘‘It puts more skilled people on the market. But it also takes a huge chunk out of the demand side.’’

Mr Evans is chief executive of Farra Engineerin­g in Dunedin and even though his business only did limited work for the smelter, he expected it to hit them in some way.

SOREC was set up to build more resilience in the engineerin­g industry but it was nearly impossible to avoid the disruption the smelter closure would cause.

Many companies had tried to diversify away from relying on the smelter, but ‘‘there’s just only so much you can do’’, Mr Evans said.

‘‘If you’ve got, say, 20 guys, and you’ve gone from just working at the smelter to having 10 guys at the smelter and 10 guys doing other stuff, you’ve still got to find something for those 10 guys at the smelter to do.

‘‘Even if you’ve diversifie­d away, you’re still going . . . to take a pretty big hit.’’

He hoped workers associated with the smelter would be able to go into new products and services, but 12 months did not give much time for that to happen.

For the businesses with reduced work after the smelter closes, they would have to take a close look at their business strategy.

‘‘Everyone’s just going to have to have a look at their strategy and say: ‘How do I survive in an environmen­t where there’s a lot less work to go around and it’s a lot more competitiv­e?’.’’

He said most companies he had talked to had already ‘‘quite substantia­lly’’ revised down their forecasts for the next 18 months.

‘‘We’re not talking 5%. Most companies are expecting a pretty big postCovid economic hit. You throw something like Tiwai [closing] on top of that [and] it’s disastrous, to be honest.’’

The engineerin­g sector would continue to have a skills shortage and Mr Evans pointed out that for every job lost at the smelter, there’s an engineerin­g job created somewhere else in New Zealand.

‘‘We’ll shed some jobs in Invercargi­ll.

‘‘People should definitely still consider it as a career option.

‘‘There’s still a lot of very wellpaid, very secure jobs in the industry. We’re seeing it growing.’’

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Southland Otago Regional Engineerin­g Collective chairman Gareth Evans said the Tiwai Point smelter closure would be felt across the sector: ‘‘it’s bad for all of us’’.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Southland Otago Regional Engineerin­g Collective chairman Gareth Evans said the Tiwai Point smelter closure would be felt across the sector: ‘‘it’s bad for all of us’’.

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