Industrial Safety News: April - May 2022

Page 36

APRIL- MAY 2022

A

proposed container berth extension at the Port of Tauranga is now awaiting a resource consent hearing before the Environment Court after applications under the Covid-19 (Fasttrack Consenting) Act 2020 and inclusion in the Government’s shovel-ready infrastructure projects programme were declined. The $65.8m project has so far lost a year due to these delays. The capacity of the port, which handles 42% of New Zealand’s container traffic, carries particular importance for the infrastructure sector as it faces rising costs and delays in sourcing building materials, due in part to global supply chain pressures. The extension, if it is

36 infrastructurenews.co.nz

Port of Tauranga project highlights need for fasttracked consents Delays in the expansion of the Port of Tauranga’s capacity are set to exacerbate New Zealand’s supply chain woes, Infrastructure New Zealand reports consented, will take up to two-and-a-half years to build and will allow for up to one million more containers to be handled each year, allowing for a decade or more of growth. At current growth rates, the port will likely run out of

capacity in three years. With just a six-month buffer, the pressure will be on in coming months as the port challenges the Government’s decision to deny its applications. In a broader sense, these delays reflect the

importance of the resource management system reform currently underway. The more effectively the consenting process can be streamlined, and leadtimes on large infrastructure projects can be dramatically reduced, the better.


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Articles inside

Comparing markets with Australia – what can we learn?

2min
page 88

Design centre future where timber construction leads the way

6min
pages 89-92

What have two years of Covid taught us about property?

5min
pages 86-87

Soaring inflation to stunt housing construction

2min
page 73

Commercial Property bounces back from restrictions

25min
pages 78-85

Comparing markets with Australia – what can we learn?

1min
page 72

A pioneering new recovery facility sets the global standard

2min
pages 62-63

An interview with Carsten Steentjes, Head of Special Sales at PlanET Biogas

3min
pages 64-65

Construction as we know it is changing

4min
pages 67-69

Hard work gets results

1min
pages 60-61

Costs of delivering infrastructure continue to rise

1min
page 66

After the revolution -- faster, cheaper stronger roads

21min
pages 54-59

Chemical safety relies on meaningful cooperation

3min
pages 52-53

Automation on the rise as labour shortage bites

2min
page 51

Treescape weathers the storm

2min
pages 44-45

Road user charges could top-up dwindling transport funding

1min
page 37

Plans to decarbonise the skies could be closer than you think

1min
pages 46-47

How to cure tunnel vision

11min
pages 40-43

The 2022 Carbon and Energy Professionals Conference is open to all

2min
pages 48-49

Drowning our sorrows and burying our sins

2min
page 50

Time and planning essential for tunnel projects

3min
pages 38-39

Port of Tauranga project highlights need for fasttracked consents

1min
page 36

Multi-purpose, safer, faster telehandlers increase productivity

3min
pages 34-35

Set up a safe and healthy work at home

6min
pages 28-32

This is not the time to put mental wellbeing on the backburner

2min
pages 25-27

The great unlearning

6min
pages 16-17

What good is safety without health?

2min
pages 8-9

Skills shortages require pragmatic response

8min
pages 4-7

Wireless EV charging a gamechanger

2min
page 33

Nearly half the world does not get enough sleep

10min
pages 10-15

No better investment than chemical safety training

2min
pages 2-3
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