New South Wales and wider Sydney Prepare with the Sydney Plan I am keeping an eye over on Sydney as the Alpha International City continues to embark on a … Continue reading Sydney Plan Gathers Steam
New South Wales and wider Sydney Prepare with the Sydney Plan I am keeping an eye over on Sydney as the Alpha International City continues to embark on a … Continue reading Sydney Plan Gathers Steam
The second part to the Port of Auckland review study is out.
From the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research
NZIER study suggests that Ports of Auckland will face constraints in the future
04 February 2015
NZIER study suggests that Ports of Auckland will face constraints in the future
Auckland Council commissioned a study from NZIER to inform Council decision making on the draft rule on port reclamation provided for in the Proposed Auckland Unitary Plan (PAUP).
Our study has assessed how long the Port of Auckland can operate within its current footprint and considered whether there are external constraints on port expansion and what the impact might be of the central wharves’ development plans on port operations. We were not asked to consider or form a view on the long term location of the port or the scope of port operations.
Our key finding is that ultimately, Ports of Auckland will need more multi-cargo wharf space to grow or some of its business will go to competing ports.
The Port has two very different port operations. The first is the relatively modern Fergusson container terminal and the second is the multi-cargo wharves located adjacent to Queens Wharf. Our findings show that the container terminal can grow on its current footprint for approximately twenty years, but this is sensitive to the growth assumption modelled.
The report’s author, Nick Allison, said the capacity of the multi-cargo wharves are coming under increasing pressure. They are used to land cargos that aren’t typically carried by containers, such as building materials, vegetables, wheat, vehicles and other goods used by households in Auckland and elsewhere in New Zealand. The ships are getting much larger and wharves weren’t built to manage such vessels. Mr Allison said the situation is further aggravated by the rapid increase in the number and increased size of cruise ships.
Laurie Kubiak, NZIER’s CEO, said that many everyday goods coming through the multi-cargo wharves are important for the livelihood of Aucklanders in ways that are not always obvious. For example, most of New Zealand’s vehicle imports come through the Port of Auckland. These imports create around 3,500 jobs in vehicle wholesaling and distribution businesses, and these jobs are concentrated in South Auckland.
—–ends—–
This study was not related to a Port of Auckland submission to the Unitary Plan that included a look at port relocations. You can see that submission and commentary on it here: PORT OF AUCKLAND – RELOCATION AND THE UNITARY PLAN
As for how will the Port move all that stuff from its main facility to South Auckland? Well this might help: PORT OF AUCKLAND INCREASE PORT RAIL SHUTTLE SERVICES
Taxpayers Onion believes Spamming Elected Representatives is Okay This one will be for the whinge files. But seriously sending over 900 emails with the EXACT same message (no individualisation) … Continue reading Difference Between Spam and Correspondence or Submissions
What is the underlying issue that has got a Councillor so upset And this is especially when those who levelled the complaint against Westgate to the Auditor General are … Continue reading Westgate Saga Rolls On
Could a method of infrastructure building from Texas help with Auckland as she grows? Bob Dey in his Unitary Plan coverage commented on who would control the Greenfield … Continue reading MUDS to Assist Greenfield Development?
A good solid run to start 2015
A thanks to readers and commenters alike. And an acknowledgement to the Main Stream Media reading the blog as well 🙂February will be a busy month with the Long Term Plan, and Unitary Plan debates continuing.
The Auckland Development Committee also meets later in the month as well where my Live Tweeting service will resume.
Welcome to Talking Auckland
Your independent commentary on Auckland Issues
Credit: 10 Social Media Facts, Figures and Statistics You Need to Know
There are now over 300 blogs on the list, although I am weeding out those which are no longer active or have removed public access to sitemeters. (Let me know if I weed out yours by mistake, or get your stats wrong).
Every month I get queries from people wanting their own blog included. I encourage and am happy to respond to queries but have prepared a list of frequently asked questions (FAQs) people can check out. Have a look at NZ Blog Rankings FAQ. This is particularly helpful to those wondering how to set up sitemeters.
Please note, the system is automatic and relies on blogs having sitemeters which allow public access to the stats.
Here are the rankings of New Zealand blogs with publicly available statistics for January 2015. Ranking is by visit numbers. I have listed the…
View original post 1,649 more words
Live streaming and on-demand streaming of Council meetings to resume After Kane with his All About Auckland live streaming of the Council meetings got dropped last term Auckland Council … Continue reading Council to Allow or Rather Resume Live Broadcasting of Meetings
Some basic ideas both small and large for a Future Auckland Last week in part of 175 year celebrations for Auckland the Herald ran a series on how a … Continue reading Those Good Ideas Made The Herald
Should Auckland Council take a more proactive approach in developing Auckland In the Long Term Plan consultation document it asks two questions as part of Key Issue Three … Continue reading THE 2015-2025 LONG TERM PLAN SERIES #4: Developing Auckland
Why oh why The development at Westgate Metropolitan Centre has really never attracted my support. I can not really support something that continues to draw on the relics of … Continue reading Auditor General to Investigate over Westgate Metropolitan Centre Development