'Devastated': Tauranga ferry proposal shelved

A ferry won’t be setting sail in Tauranga Harbour after the regional council declined to help fund the fares. Photo / John Borren

An “innovative” ferry proposal for Tauranga has been shelved over cost and patronage concerns.

Auckland water taxi company Hauraki Express was prepared to build two ferries for the service if local councils subsidised the fares.

The ferries would run from Salisbury Wharf in downtown Mount Maunganui to Tauranga city centre.

The company asked Tauranga City Council and Bay of Plenty Regional Council for $1.4m each.

Hauraki Express made a formal proposal to the councils in April. The city council agreed to pay for half if the regional council paid for the other half.

The regional council declined to help fund the service at a meeting on Thursday after the city council confirmed its support in August.

Bay of Plenty Regional councillor Kat Macmillan said the reduction in funding from government left the council no choice. Photo / John Borren
Bay of Plenty Regional councillor Kat Macmillan said the reduction in funding from government left the council no choice. Photo / John Borren

Regional councillor Kat Macmillan said the concept aligned with the council because it was ‘‘innovative’', but the challenge was funding.

Government national land transport funding would be 13 per cent less so there was about $16m less for public transport in the Bay of Plenty, she said.

This left the council with no choice, said Macmillan, who had previously expressed support for the service.

“I’m absolutely devastated about that. I want to see Hauraki Express succeed.

“It’s not a ‘no’, it’s a ‘not yet’.”

Hauraki Express special projects manager Amy Bourke said the business was disappointed not only for itself but for the community and other businesses.

Peter and Amy Bourke are disappointed their ferry proposal wasn’t supported by the regional council. Photo / Alisha Evans
Peter and Amy Bourke are disappointed their ferry proposal wasn’t supported by the regional council. Photo / Alisha Evans

It meant there would still be congestion in Tauranga, low use of public transport and excessive car use, she said after the meeting.

“We know the ferry service isn’t the solution to Tauranga’s traffic woes, but it’s part of it.”

The fully covered ferries would have room for 30 people and 15 bikes. Hauraki Express proposed to do 40 trips a day, 330 days a year with an estimated 40 per cent patronage for each trip.

A trip would cost $6 each way and take about 17 minutes.

At the meeting, council public transport director Oliver Haycock said reduced funding for public transport meant the current system would likely need to be reprioritised.

Staff compared the proposal to a 2023 feasibility study into ferries, which said there would be significant cost barriers with ferry operations.

The labour costs were lower than the study as were fuel and maintenance costs which was a risk, said Haycock.

There was also a national shortage of trained skippers, he said.

An artist's concept of the interior of the proposed Tauranga ferry. Photo / Supplied
An artist's concept of the interior of the proposed Tauranga ferry. Photo / Supplied

The council’s high-level estimates showed there could be a funding deficit of up to $500,000 per year, he said.

There would be minimal to zero fare recovery coming back to the council to offset its funding, said Haycock.

The financial risk sat with Hauraki Express, but the council should consider the implications of the trial not operating as proposed due to financial difficulty, he said.

There were also concerns about the estimated patronage numbers of 158,400 passengers per year.

Haycock said that was more than double the 70,000 bus passengers who travelled between Tauranga CBD and Mount Maunganui North each year.

The total cost for the bus service in Tauranga from July 2023 to March 2024 is $22.7m.

Tauranga ratepayers paid a $251 targeted rate for the service last year.

Harbourmaster Jon Jon Peters.
Harbourmaster Jon Jon Peters.

Harbourmaster Jon Jon Peters said because of the constraints around the high number of shipping movements in the harbour and speed restrictions, he believed a trip would take longer than 15 minutes.

Bourke said they understood the funding restrictions the council faced but not the other risks it suggested.

Hauraki Express would manage the risks and, as a commercial operation, understood financial risk, she said.

The ferries would be electric and newly built with warranties, so these were not risks to the operation, Bourke said.

“We’ve been flooded with young, qualified mariners keen to be involved in an exciting opportunity, and we see this as a career path for rangatahi.”

The service would be for commuters and tourists, school and university students and people wanting a day out, she said.

More than 80 cruise ships would be visiting Tauranga in summer and a ferry service would give them a reason to stay and explore instead of going to Rotorua or Waitomo, said Bourke.

It was not the end for the service because Hauraki Express would look for other partners, she said.

- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

 

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

14 comments

Crazy

Posted on 13-09-2024 18:28 | By Johnney

Report that 70,000 people use the bus from Tauranga CBD to Mt North a year. Less than 200 people a day with as much as 4 buses per hour. Totally illogical


Rockbit

Posted on 13-09-2024 18:45 | By Rockbit

Thanks God this ferry proposal is canned. This ferry initiative has been tried three times before, all of them failed miserably due to lack of customers. The last ferry owner/operator did a runner years ago, leaving a a lot of creditors in debt. Thanks regional council for not wasting our ratepayers money.


Rockbit

Posted on 13-09-2024 18:45 | By Rockbit

Thanks God this ferry proposal is canned. This ferry initiative has been tried three times before, all of them failed miserably due to lack of customers. The last ferry owner/operator did a runner years ago, leaving a a lot of creditors in debt. Thanks regional council for not wasting our ratepayers money.


Thank God & ferries

Posted on 13-09-2024 18:48 | By BAATS

Some one somewhere has some brains. Please add this person to our Council.


Let's Make This Happen.

Posted on 13-09-2024 19:06 | By Bruja

120 EXTRA cars are on our roads EVERY 4 WEEKS!!!! That's 1440 EXTRA cars, on OUR ROADS every year....AND climbing!!! This Ferry service simply MUST happen. To have 'roads-only' options in this RAPIDLY and CONTINUOUSLY growing area is simply NOT a sustainable option.


At Last got it right.

Posted on 13-09-2024 19:46 | By Cynical Me

$2.4 million subsidy + the fares.

It would be nice for the Regional Wallies and our council to spend that on local services and companies.
In the end, it was never going to be viable and our councillors just passed the buck instead of maning up and saying no.

Rather see the 2.4 spent on fixing potholes and shoddy roads.


A nice idea

Posted on 14-09-2024 08:46 | By earlybird

but we've been there before and it collapsed due to lack of patronage. To be honest I couldn't see it working this time either. You only have to look at bus patronage to see that, and the ferry would have been more expensive than the buses. Tauranga folk are not ready to ditch their cars just yet.


Wow a miracle

Posted on 14-09-2024 08:46 | By an_alias

Crazy it got passed twice and absolute joke of a proposal.


The way it should be.

Posted on 14-09-2024 10:02 | By Accountable

If the business can stand by itself then it is a credible business but if is relying on taxpayer/ ratepayer funding then it is obviously not a viable business. Taxpayer/ ratepayers can no longer afford to subsidize a private business operator and it's as simple as that.


Common sense prevails

Posted on 14-09-2024 10:50 | By The Sage

This could have been a great idea if the operators were self funded. I am pleased the Council is not funding them. These are private operators and, if they are so sure this is a winning business idea, they need to put their money where their mouth is and fund it themselves. It also makes them keep their finger on the throttle rather than sit back because they have local body funding. Good outcome.


@ The Sage

Posted on 14-09-2024 12:11 | By Yadick

Well said. I absolutely agree with you.
IMO the idea is great but the timing is so wrong. What, at present, is there to come to Tauranga for to make this a viable business venture? Perhaps 5 - 8yrs from now, yes.
As The Sage so rightfully puts it, if this is such a good business venture then let the private operators put their money where their mouth is . . . not my money.


Yesss!!!

Posted on 14-09-2024 20:01 | By nerak

Commonsense has prevailed. Should happen far more often. Personally, I wouldn't have the bare assed cheek to expect ratepayers to fund lunacy.


Tala M

Posted on 15-09-2024 01:20 | By Tala Maha

A ferry to get across the harbour- great idea! How much does it cost us the ratepayers to have the local buses running? Tauranga is very much lacking in spirit at the moment. Why? A lot of it has to do with suppressing anything that could bring people into the city… & here it goes again…


@ Tala Maha

Posted on 15-09-2024 18:28 | By Yadick

. . . Tauranga is very much lacking in spirit at the moment. Why?
Really?


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