Industrial Safety News: April - May 2022

Page 44

APRIL- MAY 2022

Treescape weathers the storm It was a once in a century disaster and Auckland-based arboriculture company Treescape bore the brunt of what New Zealanders call a ‘weather bomb’

“The bomb hit at 2.30am. and when I arrived at our holding yard at dawn, I found it completely underwater,” Treescape’s national fleet manager Dion Wright said. Thirteen Hilux utilities, five trucks, two staff vehicles and more than $30,000 worth of chain saws and tree felling equipment were lost. “But, after carefully assessing the situation I waded through 1.5metre deep water and climbed up on our Komatsu WA100 wheel loader and it started first time,” Dion said. The wheel loader became the central recovery vehicle in an emergency shut down operation, safely ferrying electricians, plumbers, and mechanical staff in its bucket, above the floodwaters so they could safely secure the site. Treescape’s resources were in great demand. Whilst in the middle of Auckland’s Level 4 Covid-19 44 infrastructurenews.co.nz

lockdown, Treescape was deemed as an essential service, which helped clear storm debris with the affected area in an operation which took several weeks. Komatsu immediately went to work to properly restore Treescape’s wheel loader so that it could play its role in the restoration. Like the other machinery in the yard, it had taken a big hit of high sediment contamination from the floodwaters.

Komatsu’s Auckland workshop manager Hamish Moore supported by his managing director Philip Pritchard, both also locked down, successfully sought permission from New Zealand’s Ministry of Business and Administration to bring in staff to fully clean and inspect the loader. Water had surrounded the front and rear differentials, the hydraulics, the engine and transmission. Urgent fluid samples were

Sponsored Article

sent to Komatsu’s KOWA (Komatsu Oil Wear Analysis) laboratory in Brisbane, filters and lubricants were replaced and electrical connections replaced. The WA100 was back on the storm relief job within two days. “It stood up really well, although we’re keeping a watching brief on it even now, months after the event, to be certain,” Hamish said. Treescape is one of the region’s largest green asset management companies, employing more than 600 people across New Zealand and Australia. It has more than 45 Komatsu wheel loaders and excavators at the core of an innovative program to equip the machines with a multitude of attachments to economically multi-task on each job. “We’re grateful to Komatsu for their swift intervention,” Dion Wright said. Its one less work around the company has to perform in what looks like becoming a protracted recovery. With mid-2022 now a target for the arrival of some of the new equipment. About Komatsu Komatsu develops and supplies technologies, equipment and services for the construction, mining, forklift, industrial and forestry markets. For a century, the company has been creating value for its customers through manufacturing and technology innovation, partnering with others to empower a sustainable future where people, business and the planet thrive together. Front-line industries worldwide use Komatsu solutions to develop modern infrastructure, extract fundamental minerals, maintain forests and create consumer products. The company's global service and

distributor networks support customer operations to enhance safety and productivity while optimizing performance.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

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
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.