85 days ago

Ashburton’s new freight hub will ‘smooth the supply chain’

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

By local democracy reporter Jonathan Leask:

The $18m Fairfield Freight Hub in Canterbury is on track to be open in April.

Once it’s up and running, the road-rail hub is hoped to shave exporters' costs and ease truck traffic congestion in Ashburton.

Wareing Group director Mark Wareing said relocating the rail container terminal in the centre of Ashburton to the industrial area at Fairton, about 5km north, should smooth out the supply chain and benefit farmers.

“It’s going to be good for the farmer but they won’t see it directly.
“It will be the exporter that gets the benefit through the supply chain, which should be passed on to the farmer.”

Exporters pay the freight so the savings are for the industry, not the farmer, he said.

“It will save the farmers at some point but to quantify that in dollar terms depends on several factors.”

The dry, hot summer after a mild winter has allowed contractors to seal the site, putting it on target to be operational before winter.

“It’s looking like mid-April rather than October.”

Moving the freight activities out of the centre of Ashburton will end the delays related to the shunting yards positioned next to one of the busiest intersections in town, with trains passing through town at a higher speed.

The improvement in traffic flows through Ashburton is expected to be only a minor benefit compared to the economic gains it offers.

It’s estimated that KiwiRail only carries about 12% of New Zealand’s freight, and the Fairfield Freight Hub is looking to boost those figures.

The hub will be processing about 20,000 containers per year, and moving the containers on rail will see a reduction of about 40,000 truck movements per year, Wareing said.

The aim is to reduce the costs out of the supply chain that is currently broken.

“Producers are sick of Covid, shipping disruption, not having containers available, not having transparency where the containers are.

“This project will fix some of that by securing access to get things to the port.”

And not just to Lyttelton, but via rail it can connect to Timaru, down to Dunedin and the North Island.

The hub is replicating overseas models where ports are shut off to trucks in the major cities, Wareing said.

“Looking at Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane, this is what happened in all those cities. They have subsects of rail operations that cart into the ports.”

The installation of NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi’s weigh stations north of Rakaia, which will become operational soon, could also be a boost for the hub with more operators looking to utilise rail, Wareing said.

They have already been fielding requests from firms outside Mid Canterbury looking to use the hub rather than navigate SH1.

The big hurdle is managing the port’s vehicle booking system, which requires the bookings three days in advance, Wareing said.

It is not a storage facility but a transfer depot, opening up direct access to the ports via rail with a focus on efficiency, and that equates to savings, “by smoothing out the supply chain”.

“It’s all a saving if we can do it all here rather than truck it all to Christchurch and then load the train.”

One example is seed consolidation.

From around October until late January, there are a lot of small seed loads produced to move in Mid Canterbury, Wareing said.

“Previously we would go to three or four seed stores to pick it up the small seed loads with our container trucks.

“What we are planning is to consolidate it all here on-site at the hub.”

A curtain-side truck will collect the seed from the stores, as well as other freight, and bring it to the hub to be loaded into containers.

“Instead of container trucks bouncing around some 100km, the curtain-sider will pick it up as it goes around its usual rounds, and that will save the exporters some money.”

From the end of January, the stores start to fill up and it’s then more efficient to send the container truck.

The hub will also boast reefer towers, a storage system connected to power that can keep containers chilled or frozen.

“It’s quite the development in Mid Canterbury because we haven’t had that before.”

The hub will have the capacity for about 120 containers to be kept chilled once all four reefer towers are completed, Wareing said.

Fairfield Freight Hub project is a tri-party commercial development led by the Wareing Group (which wholly owns Fairfield Freight Hub Ltd) with KiwiRail and the Ashburton District Council.

The council is contributing $2.3m to help fund the relocation of the rail yard from the town centre to the purpose-built facility at Fairton, which has been covered by funding from the Three Waters Reform Better Off Funding support package.

The Government is also chipping in $2.5m from Waka Kotahi’s NZ upgrade programme.

More messages from your neighbours
4 days ago

Poll: Would you want an unconventional funeral?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Funerals can cost as much as $22,000 and the planning can be stressful especially at a time when loved ones are grieving. Some New Zealanders are re-imagining funerals by making their own coffin or having a relaxed ceremony at home. Would you want a less traditional funeral? Share your thoughts below.

Type 'Not For Print' if you wish your comments to be excluded from the Conversations column of your local paper.

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Would you want an unconventional funeral?
  • 83.6% Yes
    83.6% Complete
  • 14.2% No
    14.2% Complete
  • 2.3% Other - I'll share below!
    2.3% Complete
1773 votes
19 hours ago

Ashburton’s old library sold

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

By local democracy reporter Jonathan Leask:

The old Ashburton Public Library building has sold, but what that means for ratepayers remains under wraps.

How much it sold for, who the new owners are, and what their plans are for the site remain sealed for now.

The building, on the corner of State Highway 1 and Havelock St, was home to the Ashburton library for nearly 60 years.

Ashburton District Council chief executive Hamish Riach said there were three offers on the property and the settlement date is May 10.

“The purchase price remains confidential at this stage.

“The new owner has asked for anonymity until they are ready to announce their plans for the site, and we will respect that.”

The funds from the sale of the old library are planned to be put towards paying off the construction of Te Whare Whakatere, the new library and civic centre, offsetting the impact on ratepayers.

The council also planned to sell the old administration building site but a decision has not yet been made, Riach said.

“The council is looking to conclude the long-term plan process before making that decision.”

The final build cost of Te Whare Whakatere is yet to be confirmed.
“Once that is confirmed we will advise publicly,” Riach said.

Riach previously stated the final cost would be known after the “resolution of all matters between the council and construction and design contractors”.

Initially budgeted at $56.7m, before its completion the council signalled an overrun in the region of 10%.

The project also received $20m from the government’s shovel-ready infrastructure fund.

While the plans for the old library site remain unknown, the fountain on the corner of the site will move to the Tinwald Domain.

Business support group manager Leanne Macdonald said the fountain is on the same title of land as the library and the council has been talking with the family that donated it about its future once the library was sold.

“The council is currently working with a local contractor to build a drinking fountain beside the playground at the Tinwald Domain and some parts of the library fountain, including the fish, will now form part of the new fountain.

“We think this is a great way to preserve a slice of its special history.”

1 day ago

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