Weekend Herald

KiwiRail chair named new chief executive

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KiwiRail chair Greg Miller has been named chief executive of the stateowned rail operator after the company said an internatio­nal search failed to find a candidate with sufficient breadth of experience.

Miller only joined the board in November. Before that he was managing director of logistics operator Toll New Zealand.

Acting chair Brian Corban says the appointmen­t, effective immediatel­y, sends a strong signal of the positive change occurring at KiwiRail. Chief operating officer Todd Moyle has been acting chief executive for the past six months.

“The board is delighted to have secured a leader of Greg’s ability,” Corban said in a statement. “We are setting up a management team and board which will take the organisati­on through this important next stage and we have found a leader with an unrivalled set of global experience in supply chain, a history with rail, domestic transport expertise, and who has led companies through significan­t growth and transforma­tion.

“We will all work closely together as several major projects now come to fruition, including the replacemen­t of KiwiRail’s Interislan­der ferry fleet, the need for a major rolling stock replacemen­t programme and new initiative­s such as the reopening of the Napier to Wairoa line, an $80 million investment in our tourism services and a new multi-modal hub in the Palmerston North region.”

KiwiRail, bought back from Toll by the former Labour Government in 2008, has been hamstrung for decades by a lack of capital to maintain the country’s 4000km track network and invest in new engines and more flexible rolling stock to remain competitiv­e.

Ageing trains and tracks have seen speed restrictio­ns placed on many routes, further reducing the competitiv­eness of freight services.

The previous National-led Government provided additional capital in two-yearly blocks. The Labour-led coalition has provided additional capital for new projects and studies — most of it from the Provincial Growth Fund.

Recent funding has included $40m for the upgrade of the company’s Coastal Pacific tourism service on the South Island. KiwiRail is also working on a business case for a new spur line to Marsden Point and an extensive upgrade of the Auckland-Whangarei rail link.

Corban was a founding director of KiwiRail in 2008 and rejoined the board last year.

Miller, whose appointmen­t last year was driven by coalition partner NZ First, is of Nga¯puhi, Ngai Te Rangi, and Rongowhaka­ata descent. He ran the Toll business from 2008 and before that ran Tranzlink Internatio­nal, a subsidiary of KiwiRail forerunner Tranzrail. He currently serves on a six-strong government-appointed working group looking at supply chains in the Upper North Island.

Miller says he has “enormous faith” in the KiwiRail management. Moyle had done an excellent job and the pair have a “fabulous” working relationsh­ip built on mutual respect, he said.

Wayne Butson, general secretary of the Rail and Maritime Transport Union, said that while the switching of roles by Miller may be unusual, he does have a deep understand­ing of rail and has developed good relationsh­ips with the country’s ports through his role at Toll.

Improving rail is a priority for the government and that pace could have been lost if an outsider had been appointed, Butson said.

“You would have probably got very little progress while they learned the business,” he said.

“Our relationsh­ip between the union and Greg in the past has always been good and harmonious,” he said. “I don’t see any of that changing in the coming weeks and months.”

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