New
Zealand’s railway to close?
New
Zealand’s Treasury has published a report which floats the
possibility of closing all but one section of the country’s rail
freight network.
13
July, 2015
KiwiRail
undertook a nine-month review of its business to try and identify
opportunities to reduce costs associated with the operation of its
freight network.
The
subsequent report suggested that “as a result of the high fixed
costs and interdependence of revenue between the different network
segments, it is challenging to reduce costs as fast or to the same
extent as a reduction in revenue.”
This
gave KiwiRail two options:
• to
retain most of the freight network and rationalise unprofitable
services and some lines on the fringes of the network, or
• to
close most or all of the freight network, with the option of
retaining the upper north island section only (Auckland to Hamilton
to Tauranga) as this part of the network carries the most freight
volumes and covers most of its costs.
While
KiwiRail naturally wants funding to continue, the Treasury believes
there is a net economic cost of continuing to fund rail at the levels
required. It is therefore requesting a more comprehensive study be
undertaken so the implications of closure can be better understood
and to enable the Government to make the most informed choice
possible.
The
comprehensive study should be public, and at arms’ length from the
Government. The Treasury has therefore recommended a one-year funding
commitment for KiwiRail whilst this process is undertaken.
However,
the Treasury continued that, in the event that closure or partial
closure is not pursued, Treasury supports a three-year funding
commitment for KiwiRail on the basis that it needs certainty to
manage its business.
So
it sounds as though a decision has been delayed, but things don’t
look rosy for a large part of New Zealand’s railway network.
Of course they'll push this deal through if they can. It was never about dairy, but about signing way this coutnry's sovereignty.
We'll
get a comfortable TPP dairy deal - Key
Prime
Minister John Key is confident New Zealand will get a free trade deal
it is comfortable with and good access into some big markets.
3
August, 2015
Four
days of talks to finalise the Trans-Pacific Partnership stalled at
the weekend after the 12 Pacific Rim countries trying to seal the
trade pact failed to reach agreement.
It
is understood dairy, car exports and intellectual property were the
three main stumbling blocks.
Listen
to John Key on Morning Report ( 5 min 1 sec )
Mr
Key told Morning Report he is confident New Zealand
will be able to secure a deal on dairy that the sector could live
with and a good deal on everything else.
"I
don't think New Zealand's ever going to be left out ... we won't get
everything we want but no country is - but we are going to get
something that I think over time will be very beneficial to New
Zealand exporters."
The
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a set of trade and investment
negotiations among 12 Asia-Pacific countries to cut tariffs and
improve access to markets.
Tim
Groser Photo: RNZ
/ Alexander Robertson
Trade
Minister Tim Groser said progress had been made on negotiations but
market access for dairy products was a sticking point.
"It
was immensely frustrating for me, for the 15 New Zealanders and
officials and experts from the agencies and for the industry leaders
who were with me ... We were just saying 'sorry, we're not with you
guys, this is one third of our exports, you can't just impose this at
the end'."
When
asked if there was enough in the TPP to make it worth New Zealand's
while, Mr Groser said: "Oh there's a hell of a lot in it and
I'll be able to prove my point when I can actually take the covers
off and show what our negotiators have got."
Mr
Groser said he understood the demand for transparency, but it was not
practical during trade talks.
Opposition concerned about TPP concessions
Labour
leader Andrew Little said it was almost inevitable there would be a
deal, but he questioned at what cost.
"The
risk is that we get to a point in a few weeks or months time and our
Government feels the need to be part of a concluded deal irrespective
of the quality of it."
The
deal was not worth being part of unless New Zealand got better dairy
access, the impact of extending pharmaceutical rights was limited and
the country retained its sovereignty, Mr Little said.
Andrew
Little Photo: RNZ
/ Alexander Robertson
Green
Party spokesperson for trade, Russel Norman, said he was not
surprised the latest talks failed, given the complicated nature of
the negotiations.
"All
New Zealanders should be worried about the concessions that the New
Zealand Government in its desperation is trying to make.
"These
are concessions that could have significant downstream effects for
many years and are very hard to overturn."
A
long-time opponent of the TPP, New Zealand First leader Winston
Peters, said he would not support something he had not seen.
"If
this deal was the best thing since sliced bread they would have told
us what the terms were," he said.
He
said New Zealand First would not accept investor-dispute provisions,
which allow multinational companies to sue governments if they lose
profits as a result of new domestic regulations.
Meanwhile,
Mr Groser said when it came to trade negotiations, "nothing is
agreed until everything is agreed".
The
next round of talks is expected to take place in a few weeks.
Forget
about 'journalism'. Here we have the spectacle of two corrupt,
despicable individuals having a pow-wow – one playing the role of
journalist; the other PM
AUDIO:
Prime Minister John Key - TPP, NZ First and UN security council
To
listen to audio GO
HERE
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