The New Zealand Herald

Railway workshop revival — at a cost

Hillside spending part of much larger funding package for KiwiRail

- Kate MacNamara

Officials recommende­d against an $85 million government investment in the revival of KiwiRail’s heavy-engineerin­g workshops in Dunedin in the 2021 Budget, but ministers pushed ahead with the spending last year regardless.

The promise to revive Hillside workshops was a Labour Party manifesto commitment.

Advice of January, 2021, recently released by the Ministry of Transport, is heavily redacted on the grounds that it is confidenti­al to the Government.

The single reason for the recommenda­tion against the spending that was not redacted was that the cost of rail wagon assembly anticipate­d for the revitalise­d workshops is estimated at 30 per cent higher than assembly of the wagons abroad.

The Labour Government said it has a vision for the Hillside workshops that is larger than the simple cost of wagon assembly as it compares to services procured in countries like China and Indonesia. KiwiRail is a state-owned enterprise.

Transport Minister Michael Wood cast the funding as an investment in “wider benefits” such as emissions reduction aims in light of man-made climate change and job creation in regional New Zealand.

“Supporting our railways by revitalisi­ng the Hillside workshops will not only contribute to our climate change goals by reducing transport emissions.

“It will also create jobs and boost our economy by acting as a magnet for private sector investment in the region, and supporting the developmen­t of a skilled workforce.

“I note that we carefully made the decision to proceed with local assembly, but not full [wagon] manufactur­e,” Wood said.

David Gordon, KiwiRail chief operating officer capital projects and asset developmen­t, said demolition of buildings is under way to build a new mechanical workshop and wagon assembly facilities.

Assembly itself is expected to begin in late 2023.

Opposition parties are unconvince­d that the plan is prudent.

“Michael Wood should park his ideology at the shed door and think about how to address a cost of living crisis and a debt crisis,” Act Party leader David Seymour said.

“If Michael Wood knew what sort of engineerin­g technology to invest in he probably wouldn’t be in his current job.”

The Hillside workshops are emblematic of New Zealand’s more vibrant industrial past, which includes the manufactur­e of both rail locomotive­s and wagons.

Following World War II, when the Hillside workshops and foundry were turned additional­ly to machining weapons components, they employed some 1200 people.

In 2012, the workshops were all but closed under a National-led coalition government that included the Act Party.

KiwiRail contracted cheaper suppliers overseas, particular­ly in China, for wagon assembly and Australian company Bradken leased the Hillside foundry.

It shut operations in 2020 citing a need to specialise in mining and resources equipment.

The $85m spend for Hillside (allocated over five years) is part of a much larger $1.3 billion envelope of funding for Kiwirail signed off in the last Budget.

The majority of the funds are earmarked for the purchase of new locomotive­s and wagons and the completion of upgrades to maintenanc­e facilities, including a new mechanical hub at Christchur­ch.

KiwiRail estimated that the Dunedin wagon assembly will create 45 operationa­l jobs, including apprentice­s.

The new funds follow a previous $20m spend on the Hillside workshops buildings and mechanical plant in Labour’s first-term (in coalition with the New Zealand First Party) through the ‘Provincial Growth Fund’.

Whether Wood’s hope that the $105m now committed to Hillside eventuates in more private sector revitalisa­tion in the region remains to be seen.

Many of the country’s traditiona­l users of such engineerin­g facilities, including the oil and gas sector and mining, are under heavily increased regulatory constraint­s and in deep decline.

Meanwhile, there is mounting pressure on the Crown to commit further funding to KiwiRail in a variety of other areas.

The inter-islander ferry upgrade is a notable example. About $435.1m in Crown equity was appropriat­ed for the programme through budgets 2019 and 2020 and $400.1m was appropriat­ed in Budget 2020 on the understand­ing that this would be the final Crown contributi­on to the full programme.

It’s not likely to be.

In early 2021 KiwiRail requested a further $565m from the Crown to fund the new inter-islander ferries.

Ministers deferred deciding fresh funding because of escalating costs and KiwiRail’s incomplete business case.

At the time the Treasury noted that committing funding at that juncture would effectivel­y commit KiwiRail to a project cost estimated at $1.76b, including over $1b in portside facility costs.

KiwiRail returned to shareholdi­ng ministers — Grant Robertson, Finance Minister and David Clark, Minister for State Owned Enterprise­s — again in June, 2021 seeking a total of $257m for the project, having revised some elements.

Ministers signed off on the contract with South Korean shipbuilde­r Hyundai Mipo Dockyard (HMD) to purchase two large rail-enabled ferries, but Treasury documents suggest they deferred committing funds at the time, and instead created a tagged contingenc­y to fund future sums.

The total for the contingenc­y is redacted.

Future costs to the Crown are likely to be considerab­le.

KiwiRail is committed to pay HMD $551m for ferries, some $150m more than the funding committed in 2020.

 ?? Photo / Peter McIntosh ?? Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, left, and Greg Miller, former group chief executive of KiwiRail, visiting Hillside workshops in 2020.
Photo / Peter McIntosh Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, left, and Greg Miller, former group chief executive of KiwiRail, visiting Hillside workshops in 2020.

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