New Zealanders want publicly-owned rail ferries!

New polling released on 15 October by the Maritime Union of New Zealand (MUNZ) shows the public wants publicly owned, rail enabled ferries.

New polling released on 15 Octo­ber by the Mar­itime Union of New Zealand (MUNZ) shows the pub­lic wants pub­licly owned, rail enabled fer­ries.

The poll was con­duct­ed by Tal­bot Mills over the peri­od of 2–14 Octo­ber and asked:

New fer­ry options

As you may be aware, in rela­tion to the Cook Strait fer­ries, “rail-enabled” means freight car­riages can roll onto and off of the fer­ry direct­ly rather than requir­ing unload­ing and reload­ing onto trucks as addi­tion­al han­dling steps on each side of Cook Strait. The effi­cien­cy gains of being “rail enabled” is thought to add 10–20% to the over­all cost to the ferries/infrastructure. The gov­ern­ment is now con­sid­er­ing three pos­si­ble options for new fer­ries. Which of the fol­low­ing options is clos­est to the one you would sup­port? 

Results showed a clear pub­lic pref­er­ence:

Mar­itime Union spokesper­son Vic­tor Bil­lot says “This shows that New Zealan­ders can see the ter­ri­ble mis­take the Min­is­ter has made in can­celling the new rail fer­ries and that is only going to get more obvi­ous as the mas­sive costs of this fias­co, like the can­cel­la­tion fee of up to a half a bil­lion dol­lars, come to light.

“Rail enabled and pub­licly owned fer­ries are vital to New Zealand’s domes­tic freight. No rail fer­ries would like­ly mean no viable rail sys­tem, and pri­vatis­ing would be like putting a toll booth on the strait and send­ing the rev­enue over­seas.

“Unions want rail-enabled fer­ries, so do logis­tics com­pa­nies includ­ing Main­freight, New Zealand First has just said they want them, and now it’s clear the peo­ple of New Zealand want them too. The ques­tion is why is the Finance Min­is­ter so intent on forc­ing New Zealan­ders into a bad deal that nobody wants?”

Road-bridg­ing — the prac­tice of tak­ing con­tain­ers from trains and trans­port­ing them onto non-rail fer­ries adds up to $200 per con­tain­er cost and takes up to three hours more per sail­ing. Indus­try experts have not­ed this addi­tion­al cost would price rail out of the north/south freight mar­ket.

Share the Post:

Related Posts