People Are Now Making Pools Out of Shipping Containers

Fire-damaged railway line across South Island to reopen early

The fire-damaged railway line linking Christchurch and Greymouth is to reopen ahead of schedule on 20 March.

railway crossing

The Midland line was badly damaged when a fire swept through 300 hectares between Cass and Springfield over Waitangi weekend, damaging several bridges.

Twelve wooden piles needed to be replaced on one bridge.

Initial estimates were that the repairs would take at least six weeks, and KiwiRail had been expecting to re-open the line in early April.

KiwiRail spokesperson Todd Moyle said the line was used by the TranzAlpine tourist train, and also for shipping coal and dairy products from the West Coast.

The line would initially open for freight, with the TranzAlpine service expected to resume shortly after.

RNZ

LINZ improving shipping safety

 

Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) has developed a world leading tool for improving shipping safety in New Zealand, says Minister for Land Information Mark Mitchell.

“The Hydrographic Risk Assessment uses the latest technology to identify risks and help update navigation information,” Mr Mitchell says.

The tool combines data from a variety of sources to produce heat maps of New Zealand waters where risks are highest, ensuring updates are given where they are needed most.
“It is important New Zealanders are kept safe at sea, and the Risk Assessment will help ensure skippers have access to the latest and most accurate navigation information.”

LINZ is focused on improving information for areas such as Queen Charlotte Sound, the Tory Channel, the Approaches to Auckland, and Tamaki Strait, which were identified to have higher levels of navigational risk than other shipping routes in New Zealand.

“The tool also helps LINZ provide navigation services for New Zealand’s four million square kilometre Exclusive Economic Zone, supporting our shipping, cruise, and tourism industries.

“As vessels get bigger and shipping routes get busier, it is important we continually map the sea floor and update charts and other information,” Mr Mitchell says.

LINZ is working with Maritime New Zealand, harbour masters, and others to assess results and plan other charting work.

Read the results of the New Zealand Hydrographic Risk Assessment on the LINZ website: http://www.linz.govt.nz/sea/charts/annual-work-programme/new-zealand-hydrographic-risk-assessment

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Content Sourced from scoop.co.nz

Calls to continue coastal shipping and keep heavy trucks off Kaikoura roads

Support for coastal shipping down the east coast of New Zealand is gaining momentum in Kaikoura, as the quake-isolated town basks in the relative calm of roads rarely troubled by heavy trucks.

Residents have started a petition asking the Government to consider permanent alternatives to long-haul trucking, pushing them off State Highway 1 when it eventually reopens.

The 7.8-magnitude earthquake last November caused major landslides north and south of Kaikoura, cutting rail services and forcing freight companies on a lengthy detour down the middle of the South Island.

Road and rail disruption from November's earthquake has prompted calls to explore coastal shipping.

EMMA DANGERFIELD/FAIRFAX NZ

Road and rail disruption from November’s earthquake has prompted calls to explore coastal shipping.

Kaikoura resident Lynda Kitchingham, who started the petition, said all through-freight should continue to be shipped, or transported by rail, when the highway opens again, essentially bypassing Kaikoura.

While trucks would continue to use the highway to make local deliveries, this was a golden opportunity to move large, long-haul freight off the road and onto sea and rail, she said.

This was more environmentally-friendly as ships and rail could carry more freight, making fewer trips, Kitchingham said.

The petition also called for a safe cycle and walking track from Marlborough to Canterbury, a concept that had been widely promoted since the earthquake.

It was also an opportunity to create a world-renowned Kaikoura coastal scenic highway, similar to Australia’s Great Ocean Road, Kitchingham said.

“Imagine the growth in prosperity for the whole region. Reinstate the rail for freight and a fantastic tourism [driving] experience with strategic stop-offs to complement the cycle and walkway.”

The road rebuild was being run by the North Canterbury Transport Infrastructure Recovery alliance, which included the NZ Transport Agency, KiwiRail and several infrastructure companies.

The alliance directed requests for comment onto KiwiRail, which had yet to respond.

The calls to look into coastal shipping for long-haul freight had garnered cross-party support in light of November’s earthquake.

Kaikoura MP Stuart Smith said coastal shipping had not been properly considered in the plans to reinstate the travel corridor following the earthquake, something he was concerned about in terms of resilience.

“We don’t have a good plan in place for our transport infrastructure,” Smith said.

“We will have an event [such as another earthquake] at some point when our road and rail networks are severed.

“Some of the stuff going up and down our roads could easily be going by sea.”

Smith said there was also the need to reduce carbon emissions in line with the Paris Agreement on climate change by 2020, and shipping was an efficient step towards that goal.

It also eliminated double-handling of freight where goods in containers were loaded on and off rail wagons before being put back onto trucks for transport to Christchurch, he said.

Green MP Steffan Browning said the Green Party had always supported coastal shipping for bulk freight for energy efficiency and to relieve pressure on the roads.

“It’s a no-brainer, but it’s a matter of how the Government can get behind it,” he said.

“We need those trucks off the road as much as possible, the Government needs to stop being beholden to the road transport industry.”

Browning said most of the long-haul freight trucks were not going door-to-door but base-to-base, and not stopping in Kaikoura to prop up small businesses.

Transport Minister Simon Bridges said coastal shipping had been a strong part of the transport response to the quake with extra services from Auckland and Tauranga to Lyttelton reducing road freight demand on SH7.

Commercial players would make decisions based on their current and future needs.

As well as NZ Connect, KiwiRail had also set up an inland freight hub in Blenheim for the movement of freight between islands, and developed additional coastal shipping plans which could be quickly put into operation if there was further disruption in the South Island, he said.

The increase in coastal freight was equivalent to 10 to 20 trucks per day off the road, Bridges said.

Kitchingham said this was a step in the right direction, but with Ministry of Transport figures showing about 550 heavy vehicle movements on SH1 between Picton and Waipara prior to the earthquake there was still a long way to go.

It was important to consider permanent alternatives, rather than just focus on using them following a disaster, she said.

The petition would run for a month and could be signed at various locations around Kaikoura, as well as online on the Truck Free Kaikoura Facebook page.

It will be presented to the Kaikoura District Council, the North Canterbury Transport Infrastructure Recovery alliance and local MPs for presentation to Parliament.

 – Kaikoura Star

Regional councillors set to debate the future of CentrePort

Quake-hit CentrePort’s should be repurposed as a transport and entertainment hub, a Wellington developer says.

Wellington property developer Ian Cassels has his own ideas of what CentrePort should look like

Wellington property developer Ian Cassels has his own ideas of what CentrePort should look like

Ian Cassels has called for the port, which suffered substantial damage after the 7.8-magnitude Kaikoura earthquake on November 14, to become like Oriental Bay with bars and transport interchanges.

His suggestion comes as the future of Wellington’s quake-hit CentrePort will be up for debate when regional councillors meet on Wednesday morning.

CentrePort container shipping wharf/dock in Wellington received damage after Novembers earthquake.

ROBERT KITCHIN/FAIRFAX NZ

CentrePort container shipping wharf/dock in Wellington received damage after Novembers earthquake.

At the meeting Greater Wellington regional councillors will get the opportunity to pass comments onto the CentrePort’s management to inform their plans for the coming financial year.

 

Greater Wellington Regional Council chairman Chris Laidlaw said Wednesday's meeting would be the first towards ...

ROBERT KITCHIN/FAIRFAX NZ

Greater Wellington Regional Council chairman Chris Laidlaw said Wednesday’s meeting would be the first towards developing a masterplan for the future of Wellington’s Port.

While returning to business as usual would be part of council plans, Greater Wellington Regional Council chairman Chris Laidlaw said the objective was to begin developing a plan beyond that.

“This is essentially about looking further ahead to enabling land owned by the Port to be factored into the decisions we are making, particularly around transport,” he said.

This would be factored into Lets Get Welly Moving initiative, which was set up to help solve the city’s congestion problems.

Property developer Ian Cassels said the earthquake had given Wellingtonians a huge opportunity to decide how the Port ...

CAMERON BURNELL/FAIRFAX NZ

Property developer Ian Cassels said the earthquake had given Wellingtonians a huge opportunity to decide how the Port and the city were alligned.

 “We are looking at a longer term development plan for the Port as a whole,” Laidlaw said.

Cassels described the quake as a hidden blessing, allowing Wellingtonians to re-think how the city and the port were best aligned.

“I’m standing in my building looking at the containers on the eastern edge of our port, and nothing could be more inappropriate for the other half of our inner harbour,” he said.

Wellington Mayor Justin Lester speaks about earthquakes and flooding

FAIRFAX NZ

Wellington Mayor Justin Lester speaks about earthquakes and flooding

“It should have magnificent stuff going on. It should look a bit like Oriental Bay. There should be entertainment and bars and water taxis should scoot across there late at night to other parts of the Harbour.”

Cassels suggested small-scale wharfs should also be installed for smaller craft and larger suburban buses should stop at CentrePort and not traverse the inner city.

“If you don’t want to walk there should be other options, but they should be electric mini buses or something. The last thing we want is diesel buses.”

The Port has been eyeing up land around Kaiwharawhara, which would be a natural move, with a similar sized operation more easily maintained off reclaimed land, he said.

But New Zealand Shipping Federation executive director Annabel Young disagreed that CentrePort’s days as a freight destination were numbered.

“If you got the cranes up and running and the wharfs up and running again it’s a case of the ships will go where the cargo is.”

But she would like to see would be a unified terminal for ferries, rather than separate operations for the the Bluebridge and Interislander.

“At the moment we don’t give them a great tourism experience at either terminal.”

Road Transport Forum chief executive Ken Shirley said there were ongoing issues around entry and exit to the Ports, and he commended the council for beginning to come to terms with that.

“We have got the Roads of National Significance virtually from Levin to Wellington Ports but it’s that last bit of interfacing with the Port that’s so important,” he said.

Wellington City Mayor Justin Lester said efforts should focus on getting CentrePort operating as it was before the quakes.

“They are a good business. The only reason we are considering this is because of the earthquake and its response. I would like to see them operate as they were in the past.”

 – Stuff