Local shipping industry advocate Rod Grout is leaving
Pacifica Shipping with a warning for policy makers that New
Zealand needs to maintain its infrastructure and not become a
feeder to Australian hub ports.
The large international shipping lines could say "we're now
hubbing in Sydney, please make sure you arrange to get your
cargo to that port", Mr Grout said.
This would leave New Zealand exporters in a risky position.
The debate about whether Tauranga, Auckland, Lyttelton or
Dunedin could become hub ports was "small fry" compared to
the bigger picture.
"If we carry on doing it willy nilly as we are the chances
are Australia will have much say as anything else." Mr Grout
said New Zealand needed to have an overview of its
infrastructure.
"People tend to take a hands off approach and let the market
dictate. The market could easily dictate Sydney or
Melbourne," he told NZPA.
Mr Grout has been a long time champion of coastal shipping in
New Zealand. He has been chief executive of Pacifica Shipping
for 25 years and will continue as a consultant to the
company's owner Skeggs Group on his departure.
Pacifica survived changes that destroyed most local shipping,
such as a move to allow international ships carry goods from
port to port within New Zealand.
Many countries restrict international shipping lines from
operating domestically, known as cabotage, to protect their
local shipping infrastructure.
Pacifica runs the Spirit of Endurance on an east coast
service and Spirit of Resolution on a West Coast service.
"When you allow international shipping lines to take their
share of domestic cargo they'll pick the eyes out of it," he
said.
Governments in New Zealand had deregulated local shipping and
were not going to change it.
"We have to live with it," he said.
Mr Grout said that local shipping companies competed against
road transport and rail and the taxpayer had to be aware of
the subsidies to them.
"Every country needs its transport infrastructure and we need
a balance of rail, road and sea and air. At the moment the
balance is to road and rail because they are heavily
subsidised and shipping isn't subsidised," he said.
The bigger picture was that international shipping lines were
looking at how they did things in the wake of the global
economic downturn.
The outcome of this could be that New Zealand becomes a
feeder to Australian distribution centres.
"New Zealand has to set up its own distribution centre, its
own hub, just like companies do," Mr Grout said.
He retires at the end of the month and will continue as a
director of Skeggs.
He was president of the New Zealand Shipping Federation for
12 years until 2008.
"Despite the present Government's apathy towards domestic
shipping, I see companies like Pacifica playing a significant
role in New Zealand's economic prospects in the years ahead,"
he said.
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