Major milestone achieved for Wiri Inland Port link
MEDIA RELEASE
12 November 2009 - for immediate
release
Major milestone achieved for Wiri
Inland Port rail link
Construction of the rail
exchange at Ports of Auckland’s Wiri Inland Port in South
Auckland is a step closer to completion.
Two of
three rail siding tracks that will connect the inland port
to the Waitemata seaport are in place and work is well under
way on the concrete hardstand.
Ports of Auckland
Managing Director Jens Madsen said the project was on
schedule for completion in January 2010 and that the first
train would arrive early in the New Year.
“This
is about bringing the seaport right to the doorstep of
businesses in South Auckland,” said Mr
Madsen.
“Exporters and importers will be able to
drop off and pick up containers without having to negotiate
the Auckland motorways.”
Containers will move to
and from the seaport by rail, saving as many as 100,000
central city truck trips per annum once the service is fully
operational.
“By using the Wiri Inland Port as a
storage centre and staging post, we’ll also free up room
and create efficiencies at the Waitemata seaport. This is
good news for the whole supply chain,” Mr Madsen
said.
Mr Madsen said carbon emission modelling by
Ports of Auckland had shown big potential savings for
businesses close to the Wiri Inland Port.
“A lot
of our current customers are based within eight kilometres
of the inland port. By using the rail link to the seaport,
this group will be able to reduce the carbon emissions of
transporting their containers by up to 25%,” he
said.
The Wiri Inland Port is strategically located off
Wiri Station Road in South Auckland, close to Auckland
International Airport, and adjacent to SH1 and SH20.
Brian Perry Civil and KiwiRail are undertaking the works, including the construction of the three rail sidings, involving around 2,000m of additional rail track, and the hardstand.
Each of the three sidings is capable of taking 22 wagons. Together, they will enable two trains to be worked simultaneously, with the third track available for repositioning locomotives.
The hardstand from which the containers will be loaded and unloaded is 50% complete. When finished, after 15 major concrete pours, it will be 450 metres long and cover nearly 11,000 square metres, just shy of the overall size of the Britomart Transport Centre station platform.
Ports of Auckland is New Zealand’s largest container port by volume, handling around 840,000 TEU (20ft-equivalent units), more than 1,600 ship calls and 2.7 million tonnes of break-bulk (non-containerised) cargo per annum. It is New Zealand’s major import port and a key partner to export industries. Ports of Auckland is 100%-owned by Auckland Regional Holdings.
KiwiRail is New
Zealand's leading surface transport operator, providing a
cost-efficient line-haul service for the movement of bulk
commodities or containerised
freight.
ends