NZ Trucking Magazine June 2022

Page 118

NZ Trucking Association can be contacted on 0800 338 338 or info@nztruckingassn.co.nz

David Boyce chief executive officer

TACKLING THE ISSUES FACE ON, TOGETHER

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he Trucking Industry Summit is not an old-fashioned conference. It is short, sharp and well organised. Conferences in the past have been drawn-out events with long sessions from speakers who want to tell the audience about themselves rather than addressing the key industry issues. Together, the New Zealand Trucking Association and National Road Carriers represent most of the supply chain. The Trucking Industry Summit enables the industry to unite to create discussions and offer solutions. The summit will be held in Christchurch on Saturday 30 July at the new Christchurch Te Pae Convention Centre and will be unmissable. Bookings are open online. The presenters and full programme will be announced soon. Delegates in Christchurch the night before are invited to attend a networking evening. This will be a fantastic opportunity for friends and colleagues to connect again. After the summit, there will be time to reflect, continue discussions and enjoy refreshments. The team is preparing a discussion document to tackle industry issues. The hard questions will be put to the presenters and followed up on after the event. It has been decided to focus on five key areas. Here is a sneak preview of our five key issues.

Workforce strategy Every aspect of the transport supply chain is under pressure to find skilled workers. New Zealand will need

thousands of extra truck drivers by 2025, but we are already short of drivers and other logistics workers. Trucking operators compete with other industry and overseas recruiters for the same people. The discussion document calls for: • Better government funding for training initiatives • A streamlined driver licencing system • Competency-based training and licencing, including driver-to-driver mentoring • Greater industry diversity, including women, Maori, Pasifika, and migrants • Truck drivers to be reinstated on the immigration skills shortage list • Immigration levels adjusted to assist visas • More flexibility for visas based on experience.

Safe roads The road is the workplace of the supply chain. We have a deficit of new roading infrastructure that needs to catch up with demand. Poor road surfaces and a lack of maintenance have seen a deterioration of the roading network, and in some cases, the road surface is a major safety issue. We have a fragile state highway connection system affected by weather and natural disasters. Few alternate routes in some areas mean that communities can be cut off from the delivery of essential items. We would like to see: • Accelerated infrastructure investment on key metro, regional and national freight routes, including fixing the

connecting access gaps in the network • Control and budget for key freight routes to come under Waka Kotahi • A freight infrastructure champion attached to Waka Kotahi • A national map of freight infrastructure gaps • Good safe road design • Better-quality road surfaces that can withstand weather events • More active repairs as potholes open • Guaranteed safe arterial access to key ports and freight hubs.

Decarbonisation New Zealand has set a target to reach net zero by 2050. The carbon footprint of transport is to reduce by up to 90% of 2015 levels by 2050. This would mean a 17% reduction in total gross greenhouse gas emissions. The challenge for transport operators is that the New Zealand truck fleet is old by international standards at an average age of 17.5 years. Older trucks have the highest crash frequencies and lack improved safety technology. Older trucks produce higher emissions. More than 20% of heavy vehicles are pre-1996, with poor emission standards. Less than half of the New Zealand truck fleet meets the latest emission standards. Older trucks have poor community impacts, including noise. Older trucks perform poorly and have a greater toll on drivers. Trucks that meet the Euro-6 standard produce 95% fewer emissions than Euro-3 trucks. Early alternative technology trucks are expensive, and early adopters risk stranded assets if they choose the wrong

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The Trucking Industry Summit enables the industry to unite to create discussions and offer solutions. The hard questions will be put to the presenters and followed up on after the event. 118  New Zealand Trucking

June 2022

Hella NZ


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