Taranaki Daily News

Taranaki part of $250k rail study

- MIKE WATSON

Port Taranaki has the facilities and infrastruc­ture to make logson-rail practical and economical­ly viable, its chief executive says.

Regional economic developmen­t minister Shane Jones last week announced the start of rail feasibilit­y studies in Taranaki, Kawerau and Southland to improve rail connection­s in the three regions.

The focus of the $250,000 rail study in New Plymouth would be on forestry exports, Jones said.

The funding for the feasibilit­y study is part of the coalition government’s $8.75m handout for regional rail initiative­s from the provincial growth fund. Port Taranaki had been in discussion­s with KiwiRail for the past 12 months about initiative­s to develop a rail option for log exports, chief executive Guy Roper said.

‘‘We have been well across this and believe it is important to help drive regional economic growth, supporting the wider region that Port Taranaki services.’’

Port Taranaki’s log volumes have been increasing with exports up 36 per cent in 2016-17, and 63 per cent for half year result to December 31, 2017.

Last year 486,000 tonnes of logs were shipped from Port Taranaki.

The trend was expected to continue as demand from overseas increased, he said.

Port Taranaki had the on-site rail facilities and storage areas and could enhance berth access to maximise operations for rail, Roper said.

‘‘It can be handled now. We have the rail line, storage, land available and exporter interest to quickly and effectivel­y service not just the Taranaki region but the forestry industry in the southern region of the North Island.’’

Bringing more logs to the port through rail would result in increased ship visits and also ease the pressure on the region’s roads, he said.

New Zealand Forestry Ltd Taranaki regional manager Cam Eyre said the industry had been working on how to improve transport links within Taranaki for several years and the government’s announceme­nt was a positive sign.

‘‘We support the study and believe it would be positive for the industry if costs can be reduced transporti­ng logs by rail from marginal forest areas,’’ he said.

Eyre said the volume of logs carried by rail would need to be high. Any feasibilit­y study would look at log prices and volume to ensure the rail network was sustainabl­e, he said.

‘‘A study would be a good start to draw a line in the sand on what the forestry industry can, and cannot do.’’

Eyre was unsure if a new railhead was establishe­d and the network upgraded to carry more logs, whether it would mean less trucks on the road.

‘‘It comes down to how much volume of logs can be transporte­d on rail. It has to work cost-wise with the forestry owner, and not every log will go on a train.

‘‘Until we have a robust rail network there will still be trucks operating on the road.’’

Road Transport Industry Taranaki regional executive member Tom Cloke welcomed the study and believed it could create more work for the transport industry.

‘‘There’s always been a place for rail but the study would need to look at the infrastruc­ture needed and logistics in setting up a network,’’ he said.

‘‘Any rail network would need a robust transport system to and from the rail head to load and deliver.’’

To be competitiv­e, rail would need to be able to shift a variety of freight, not just logs, quickly and efficientl­y, he said.

New Plymouth MP Jonathan Young said the study would need to focus on the cost benefit ratio for the Taranaki region.

‘‘What the economic advantage is of putting more logs on rail is the big question mark,’’ he said.

In a press release KiwiRail chief executive Peter Reidy said rail helped reduce congestion on roads, cut carbon emissions, made roads safer and lowered spending on road maintenanc­e and upgrades.

A recent study showed the costs savings totalled $1.5 billion, he said.

KiwiRail transporte­d around 25 per cent of the country’s exports and played a critical role in regional tourism, he said.

Fonterra logistics network manager Andrew Cleland said the company worked closely with KiwiRail to ensure the network had capacity to support its transport needs.

‘‘We are interested in the rail feasibilit­y studies and look forward to reviewing the results with KiwiRail in due course,’’ he said.

 ??  ?? More rail/road hubs, such as Smart Road hub, may be needed if the rail network was upgraded in Taranaki.
More rail/road hubs, such as Smart Road hub, may be needed if the rail network was upgraded in Taranaki.

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