Extraordinary Times Do Not Call For Extraordinary Bad Decisions
Ports of Auckland is caught in a perfect storm, the cumulation of extraordinary global and local circumstances, but the difficulties and performance issues should not ignite the lobby on the location of a new port, nor be caught by parochial, political football when ports around the country are working together to clear the unprecedented volume of freight, says Auckland Business Chamber CEO Michael Barnett.
“This is an extraordinary situation caused by the upheavals to normal freight flows from the pandemic and should not be used to pressure politicians to make an extraordinary bad decision that will not be in the best interests of all New Zealand in the long term,” he said. “POAL has to act decisively and with urgency to lift the game, hire the people to operate the cranes, bed down their automation and rebuild public confidence, but they should not be penalised for what many see as an own goal.”
Mr Barnett said Northport will be dispatching up to 800 truckloads over the next week to get the goods to Auckland and down country.
“The sheer volume of heavy traffic and inadequacy of the roading infrastructure tells us that Northport is not the solution to our port infrastructure. Importers are going to wear a hefty bill for the extra freight costs wherever their goods have been offloaded and we, the consumers, will wear those higher prices eventually. It’s frustrating, but the cooperation and collaboration between the ports to get the goods through in time for Christmas should be the priority and is the best short-term solution.”