Otago Daily Times

EDITORIAL

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SOUTHLAND does not need woolly promises of help and platitudin­ous pep talks. It needs a concrete plan to meet and then beat the economic and social destructio­n left when New Zealand Aluminium Smelters’ closes Tiwai Point.

This is not hyperbole. More than 1000 jobs will go when the smelter closes, and another 1200plus jobs indirectly associated with the smelter will be rendered uncertain. Some of the most skilled and best paid positions in the region will be lost and thousands of workers and families, and untold businesses, will be hurt.

The looming costs are hinted at in the figures most often pitched as reasons to move heaven and earth to keep the smelter online. Previous estimates suggest it accounts for more than 6% of the region’s GDP, and well over $400 million to the region’s economy.

That cash keeps people in work and businesses in profit. It helps people pay their mortgages and their grocery bills, helps them support local schools and pay their sports club subscripti­ons, and keeps them working in and contributi­ng to the South.

These people, families and communitie­s do not have long to consider the effect of losing the smelter. NZAS will terminate its electricit­y contract with Meridian Energy in August 2021, when the winddown is complete.

They have little time to decide what to do next and an uncertain time in which to do it. They need no reminding we face a prolonged pandemicin­duced recession, and that finding good work and a strong income may be difficult.

Of course, many looked to the future when closure was first mooted in 2011, and again in 2013, when thethen Nationalle­d Government gave the company a $30 million sweetener after Rio Tinto put the smelter on a list of underperfo­rming sites marked for sale.

That money was supposed to be used to future proof the operation. The company was told the Government — and now, the current Government — would not dig into its pockets again.

The future loomed large last year when Rio Tinto started a ‘‘strategic review’’ of the smelter’s operation and how it stacked up against its costs and the everfluctu­ating-value of the product it released to the volatile internatio­nal market.

It also made it clear it was still paying too much for its electricit­y, and that plenty hinged on the Electricit­y Authority’s decadelong transmissi­on pricing review. When the review concluded in June, the $11 million saved from NZAS’s $50 million to $70 million transmissi­on bill was, as expected, called too little, too late.

It has always been clear energy costs would not be an issue if global aluminium markets were stronger, and that such cost will almost always be a bargaining chip as long as the company used such a significan­t proportion — about 12% — of domestic electricit­y supply.

It has also been clear successive Government­s would not intervene to the extent Rio Tinto wanted. Without this, it has been clear the smelter will, eventually, close.

There is little time to prepare for a postsmelte­r future but successive Government­s have had the best part of a decade to ensure there was a plan to cope with, and then fill the gap left when Rio Tinto pulled the plug on its regionally and nationally significan­t operation at Tiwai Point.

Treasury, Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment and Ministry of Social Developmen­t officials have had plenty of time, regardless of which parties were in Government, to forge all manner of strategies for a postsmelte­r future. They, and a succession of politician­s, have had years to prepare for the inevitable.

As such, Southlande­rs have every right to expect Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Finance Minister Grant Robertson to outline robust, detailed plans when they take up Labour Invercargi­ll List MP Liz Craig’s invitation to visit Invercargi­ll and ‘‘discuss how the Government might help us support those affected, grow local jobs and create a sustainabl­e future for the Southland economy’’.

They can point to work that has already started in aquacultur­e and agricultur­e, but the community leaders now galvanisin­g to fight the closure will hope they will also revive the work that should have been done months, or years, before NZAS yesterday confirmed the small window of opportunit­y to secure the smelter was all but closed.

If not, Southlande­rs have every right to feel let down by a multinatio­nal company and by the government­s that saw this coming.

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