Katikati Advertiser

High costs may sink ferry plans

Study shows fares would need to be be high to cover investment

- Kiri Gillespie

Efforts to establish a ferry service in Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty could be shelved after a feasibilit­y study found a single trip on one proposed service could cost as much as $404 if patronage was low.

The findings have prompted a recommenda­tion that commuters should rely on buses instead.

Bay of Plenty Regional Council Public Transport Committee will meet tomorrow to hear the findings of the study, carried out by transporta­tion consultant­s MRCagney.

It comes after a case for a ferry service was put to the council as an option to reduce cars on roads.

The study focused on three potential levels of service for three possible routes. These were a minimum service running five days a week during peak periods, a basic regular service and a high-quality service operating seven days a week .

The ferry routes were for Omokoroa ¯ to Tauranga, Mount Maunganui to Tauranga, and O¯ mokoroa to Mount Maunganui then Tauranga.

A minimum ferry service from Omokoroa ¯ to Tauranga would cost an estimated $4.5m to buy and refit three vessels, plus $714,000 annually to run. A basic service would cost $46.5m with annual operating costs of $1.6m.

A high-quality service was expected to cost $76.5m to establish and $3.1m a year to operate. .

The proposed ferry route from Mount Maunganui to Tauranga would cost $9m to set up and $600,000 a year to run for a minimum service. A basic service would cost $32m and $1.1m annually while a high-quality service would cost about $56m and $1.9m a year .

The O¯ mokoroa to Mount Maunganui to Tauranga service offered a minimum spend of at least $13m and $1.1m a year to operate. A basic service would cost $57.5m and another $1.9m a year to operate. A high-quality service between all three centres was expected to cost $87.5m and another $3.7m a year to operate.

The study also took into account the patronage estimates (mode share) with presumptio­ns of either 5 per cent, 20 per cent, or an “aspiration­al” 50 per cent of travellers using a ferry. Passenger estimates were used to calculate the fares needed to make each service viable.

Based on¯5 per cent of travellers using the Omokoroa to Tauranga service, fares would range from $93 to $404 per passenger trip depending on whether it was a minimum or highqualit­y service.

At 20 per cent, the fares ranged from $23 per passenger trip to $101, and at 50 per cent it ranged from $9 to $40.

The figures did not take into account likely annual vessel or wharf costs, which were expected to potentiall­y double the fares.MRCagney said 50 per cent of travellers would need to use the ferry for it to be viable.

Tauranga’s existing public transport usage (mode share) percentage was about 1 per cent, compared to 2-5 per cent in similarNew Zealand cities, according to the Tauranga Transport Strategy 2012-2042.

A ferry trial last year was described by passengers as “superb”.

MRCagney said plans for a T3 lane on the O¯ mokoroa Rd approach to State Highway 2 and planned roading and public transport improvemen­ts were expected to cannibalis­e ferry service demand.

In Auckland, Fullers charges a minimum of $27.50 per trip to Waiheke Island.

In Wellington, an Interislan­der trip to Picton costs $68.

In a report, to be presented to the committee, transport planning manager Oliver Haycock and principal adviser Bron Healey said there were “significan­t cost barriers to ferries”.

The investment needed was “unlikely to justify such investment for a mode that is only useful to travel to a single destinatio­n”.

“In the short to medium term, it would seem prudent to continue the work already under way to make best use of the existing bus-based public transport network supported by appropriat­e levels of priority and infrastruc­ture.”

Haycock and Healey said the option of future ferry services should be preserved.

Sustainabl­e Bay of Plenty’s Glen Crowther said it had always thought Tauranga CBD to Mount Maunganui ferry services was a great idea, especially over summer, but the financial case had to stack up.

Crowther said, that with basic service ferry costs reaching more than $100 and $200 per trip, buses and rail seemed better options.

“The bus service can be affordable, because that . . . cost is split between bus fares, regional council rates, and NZTA [Waka Kotahi] — and there’s lots of potential to improve services and get more people on to buses, significan­tly reducing that cost per trip. Whereas, taking the feasibilit­y study at face value, a publicly funded ferry service would be unaffordab­le.”

Crowther said there were a lot of people calling for a feasibilit­y study into passenger rail which would be quicker “faster and even more reliable”.

“It would service a much wider area and could pick up a lot more passengers.”

It was recommende­d the committee agree to defer any further investigat­ion of Tauranga and Western Bay of Plenty ferry services until the developmen­t of the 2027 long-term plans and the 2027-2030 National Land Transport Programme.

Tomorrow’s meeting will be held at Regional House from 9.30am and is open to the public in person or online via livestream.

 ?? Photo / WBOPDC ?? An aerial view of Omokoroa ¯ wharf, where a potential ferry service could start from.
Photo / WBOPDC An aerial view of Omokoroa ¯ wharf, where a potential ferry service could start from.

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