The KiwiRail press release:
"The decision by a major central North Island timber
mill to switch from road to rail to move its export products to
Wellington’s CentrePort, is a result of KiwiRail Group’s push to link
major industrial and commercial sites to main lines.
“Re-establishing the railway siding at
WPI Timber’s Tangiwai timber mill in the Central North Island
connects us to a major customer,” said KiwiRail Group’s Commercial
General Manager Aaron Temperton. “By making minor adjustments to
existing freight services which run past the mill, we have been able to
offer a competitive service that is a win for the mill and ourselves,
not to mention the benefits to the environment.”
The switch to rail, using an existing
freight service, will mean around 2000 fewer truck movements a year,
and associated environmental benefits. It follows an agreement reached
between KiwiRail Group and WPI Timber to reinstate and upgrade a
disused siding at the Tangiwai timber mill.
Aaron Temperton says the new business
has been made possible by comparatively modest investment in
infrastructure and adds further robustness to an existing service that
runs past the mill.
“We have a strong relationship with
WPI which meant we were able to identify this opportunity and are
continuing to look at other business opportunities within their group,”
he said.
ONTRACK – the infrastructure arm of
KiwiRail Group - expects to have the siding ready for use by mid-May.
It has also leased land to the mill for the additional space needed to
load the timber onto the wagons. A new transit store will be built
next to the siding to ensure the timber is staged and kept undercover
before it is loaded onto the wagons.
The mill, a division of WPI
International expects to move about 50,000 cubic metres of sawn timber
each year, but there is the potential for significant increase in these
volumes, so the siding will be built to accommodate future business
growth, Mr Temperton says.
The company had been using road to move its export product to Wellington from the mill on SH 49.
The export timber will be carried on
the existing daily rail service that runs to and from the nearby Karioi
Pulp Mill, also owned by WPI.
‘By making some minor changes to the
configuration of that service, we have the capacity to carry the sawn
timber,” Mr Temperton says. “Pulp volumes vary during the week, and
as we cater for the larger loads, the additional timber business means
better utilisation of the existing wagon fleet we have available for
this service.”
WPI has sought funding from the New
Zealand Transport Agency’s Alternative To Road (ATR) scheme to assist
with financing the initiative.
Mr Temperton says one of KiwiRail
Group’s key priorities is to extend the rail network to connect to more
customers, and the group is investigating a number of initiatives
similar to this around the country.
In Auckland work will start shortly on building a new rail siding into the Ports of Auckland’s inland port at Wiri.
“Compared to the costs of improving
the roading network, comparatively modest investment in rail
infrastructure significantly increases the amount of freight we can
haul, not to mention the associated environmental and safety benefits
of rail.”
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