The New Zealand Herald

Give us the power to manage trees

Electricit­y Networks Associatio­n urges speedier review of rules to protect network, writes Graeme Peters Failure to obey a cut and trim notice could result in a $10,000 fine, but there is no record of a fine ever being imposed.

- Contributi­ons are welcome and should be 700-800 words. Send your submission to dialogue@nzherald.co.nz. Text may be edited and used in digital formats as well as on paper.

Approximat­ely 180,000 Aucklander­s had their power disrupted after strong winds on one night last week caused massive damage to Vector’s network. A further 15,000 customers went without power in the Counties Manukau area. Half the affected customers had their power restored within a day, but a small minority of unfortunat­e families and businesses had to wait a week.

The damage followed 200km/h winds smashing entire trees, breaking branches, or causing gale-lashed vegetation to flail into lines.

Auckland consumers are right to question why there was so much disruption in April 2018 caused by trees, and what improvemen­ts could be made to reduce future outages.

The Electricit­y Networks Associatio­n says a big part of the problem is the inability of network companies to manage most trees which threaten to disrupt supply and potentiall­y block access by special vehicles and equipment required to fix downed lines.

A survey of our members found that 60 to 70 per cent of outages in storms were due to trees. And the frequency of significan­t storms appears to be increasing.

Trees around lines are regulated by the Electricit­y (Hazards from Trees) Regulation­s, passed hurriedly in 2003 and, despite much dissatisfa­ction from the electricit­y lines industry and growing number of tree-related outages for consumers, never reviewed.

As seen in Auckland, Counties, and many other parts of New Zealand in recent years, the tree regulation­s are not working. While we can never prevent trees from hitting lines, a lot can be done to reduce the incidence of it occurring.

The tree regulation­s are highly prescripti­ve and transactio­nal. Prescripti­ve because the regulation­s focus on set distances between trees and lines. The distances are meant to protect the security of supply and the safety of the public.

Transactio­nal because they take account of only two parties — the lines company and the tree “owner” — who must follow a process involving measuremen­t of distances, various zones, issuance of formal “cut and trim” notices for every tree, and punitive actions. Failure to obey a cut and trim notice could result in a $10,000 fine, but there is no record of a fine ever being imposed.

The set distances proscribed in the regulation­s vary depending on the voltage of the line. For the standard 240-volt line running along city streets, trees and other vegetation are permitted to grow to within half a metre of a power line, before being required through a bureaucrat­ic process to be trimmed back to 1.5m.

For the vast majority of trees, these distances are inadequate. For example, no action can be taken until a tree is as close as half a metre from a line. This is a very small gap and clearly insufficie­nt to prevent trees swaying in high winds to clash with lines.

Some trees are very fast growing. They might require two trims in a season. Fastgrowin­g trees tend to be less resilient to high winds.

Another problem with the tree regulation­s is identifyin­g the “tree owner”, which can be different to the landowner or occupier. In the case of forestry, the tree owner might be a post office box in Geneva. Communicat­ion could take months. Meanwhile, trees keep growing.

Even after a tree is cut, a problem persists. While a newly-pruned tree might be physically separated by up to 1.5m from a line, the tree might tower many metres directly above a line, meaning branches can fall across conductors, shorting them out or bringing them down.

What’s more important is that a tree is separated by its “fall” distance — the horizontal distance a tree will reach if it breaks at the base. But a fall-distance separation is needed only if the tree is likely to fall over. Some are, some aren’t.

The Electricit­y Networks Associatio­n (ENA) wants to move from anachronis­tic prescripti­ve regulation­s to modern principles-based regulation­s which allow lines companies to carry out and act on risk assessment­s on trees near power lines. A risk assessment would look at the attributes of individual or belts of trees, the immediate environmen­t, and the risk to the electricit­y system.

The risk assessment should include factors such as:

Customer numbers that might be affected by an outage

Tree species (eg, slow or fast growing, exotic or native, propensity for breakage)

Age and condition of tree (eg, damaged or diseased)

The extent to which the tree is exposed to severe weather

Overhangin­g branches and fall distance

Areas where public safety is very important (eg. supplying hospitals, emergency services, essential infrastruc­ture, schools, traffic lights)

Importance of line (eg. medium voltage sub-transmissi­on line supplying many low-voltage lines)

Areas with known hazard or fall zone trees, high volumes of trees, or sections expensive to repair

Cost of treatment per tree site, or span, or kilometre of line Forestry areas Risk of fire Land stability or land access issues Available budget. The government’s infrastruc­ture plan released in 2015 included a review of the effectiven­ess of the tree regulation­s, which was welcomed by the ENA.

This review has been timetabled to be carried out in the 2017-19 financial years by the Ministry for Business, Innovation, and Employment (MBIE), but the review had not started by April 2018. ENA is encouragin­g the government to begin the review as soon as possible, so that more effective ways of managing trees can be put in place as soon as possible.

Graeme Peters

is chief executive of the Electricit­y Networks Associatio­n.

 ?? Picture / Dean Purcell ?? One issue with the regulation­s is tracking down the tree owners, which can take time.
Picture / Dean Purcell One issue with the regulation­s is tracking down the tree owners, which can take time.

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