There was a national shortage of qualified personnel and very limited training options within New Zealand which continued to restrict our ability to develop and sustain a 24/7 capability.
‘‘The RNZAF is aware of the concerns that have been raised, but a full solution is beyond the current scope of resources. We continue to seek a solution that is acceptable and sustainable for all parties.’'
As part of a pre-election wishlist, aviation groups are pushing for the next government to ensure the RNZAF base at Ōhakea is locked in as an alternative airport for long-haul planes if they can’t land at Auckland, Wellington or Christchurch.
Long-haul airlines that nominate Ōhakea as their alternate save more than a tonne of fuel and eight tonnes of carbon emissions for every service arriving in New Zealand. Ōhakea’s unavailability at times has already hit airlines.
Last year, Covid-19 meant the base’s firefighting capability sometimes wasn’t sufficient to handle some Air New Zealand return flights from New York that had Ōhakea as a backup if they couldn’t land at Auckland.
In a joint push, airports and airlines say that, for the past year, Ōhakea has had insufficient rescue fire resources to provide the backup service.
“Airlines unable to nominate Ōhakea carry fewer passengers, carry less freight, and burn more carbon than they need to. Airlines already meet the costs of nomination – the solution lies in resource allocation,” NZ Airports Association and the Board of Airline Representatives of NZ says as part of the wishlist for the next government.
Additional rescue fire resources for the base would enable significant carbon reductions and cost savings for air services, airports and airlines say.
Grant Bradley has worked at the Herald since 1993. He is the Business Herald’s deputy editor and covers aviation and tourism.