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Growing mechanization causes financial stress

The owner of a Māori forestry company said that the industry’s growing mechanisation has put forestry contracting businesses under financial stress, in turn putting workers more at risk. Source: Radio New Zealand

The push towards increased safety was excellent, but it had meant there was much more risk of companies quickly going bankrupt.

Mr Kajavala, general manager of Kajavala Forestry, said forest contractors carried all of the risk in the industry and were being forced to pay debt on new equipment worth millions of dollars with the potential for a drop in safety standards.

“They carry the entire capital risk and when a contracting business is under financial stress it increases the potential for short cuts to be taken, and it is those short cuts that are highly dangerous for our people,” he said.

“The contractor takes the capital risk. The industry may or may not support them and that can lead to catastrophic shortcuts being taken – that’s what worries me.”

Mr Kajavala said there had been a major push towards increased safety for the last year which was excellent, and part of that was more mechanisation.

“People in machines are vastly more safe than people on the ground with a chainsaw,” he said.

“With this comes millions of dollars of pieces of equipment, so there’s a lot more at stake and pressure to service the debt that fuels that increase in capital – so stakes are higher.

“The consequences of not making ends meet come hard and come fast.

“The speed at which a contractor can go down the tubes when they’ve got such a significant debt overhead is probably the biggest change.

“Going from mildly financially unwell to bankrupt can happen very quickly and so for the workers it can catch them unaware.”

Forestry workers have been hit hard recently, with the redundancy of 200 workers at one of the country’s largest forest contractors, Harvestpro and log transport business, Waimea Contract Carriers now in voluntary administration.

Waimea transports logs for Nelson Forests, Hancock Forest Management and other forest owners.