9 Jul 2021

Eastern BOP leaders pin hopes on new projects to lure people 'home'

7:10 am on 9 July 2021

Eastern Bay of Plenty business leaders are striving to draw people back into the sub-region by creating 7000 new jobs in the next decade, using cash provided by the Provincial Growth Fund (PGF).

Scenic view of the Bay at Whakatane, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand

Scenic view of the Bay at Whakatāne, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand. Photo: 123RF

The fund has poured about $200m into a dozen large projects in the communities of Kawerau, Whakatāne and Ōpōtiki.

The subregion's economic development agency, Toi EDA aimed to create 7000 new full time jobs, adding an extra $690m to GDP in the region, by 2030.

Toi EDA general manager of strategy Karl Gradon said the PGF provided communities the cash injection needed to develop catalytic infrastructure - such as the Putauaki Trust Industrial Hub in Kawerau, or funding irrigation for horticulture on the East Cape.

He believed the jobs created as a result would draw people home and revitalise the region.

"A lot of people have left these communities, especially those that have gone to university. They've never had the roles to come back to."

The region would benefit greatly from economic development that created jobs, but also saw the area's social deprivation and housing issues addressed, Gradon said.

"[It] creates a thriving community. People want to come home. People want to give back to their marae, they want to give back to their whanāu. They want to be able to create something they never had for the next generation."

One business attracting people to the region was iwi-directed Whakatōhea Mussels.

The Ōpōtiki-based company ran the country's first open ocean mussel farm.

After launching in 2014, the business had steadily grown.

By August 2021, it would have 107 people on the payroll and it had almost finished building a new processing plant in Ōpōtiki.

Chief executive Peter Vitasovich said the business planned to provide for generations to come.

"Our biggest focus is to grow Ōpōtiki again. Right now a majority of our staff have been local people. As the business has grown, it has attracted people from other regions to come and settle in the town," Vitasovich said.

People moving to the region included Whakatōhea iwi members, and he saw aquaculture as a huge opportunity for the Bay of Plenty.

"Everything's in place. Now for us, it will be keeping a steady hand on the tiller."

The business would be looking to develop its marine farming operations and branch out into creating new products, such as pharmaceuticals.

Our Community Project chairperson Stephanie O'Sullivan

Whakatāne District Council chief executive Stephanie O'Sullivan says a new harbour would provide significant employment opportunities. File photo Photo: RNZ / Jo O'Brien

Whakatāne received $19.6m from the PGF to develop a commercial boat harbour.

Whakatāne District Council chief executive Stephanie O'Sullivan welcomed this opportunity.

"We have two of the three largest aluminium boat builders in New Zealand here in Whakatāne. They need a place to be able to launch and finish their boats."

The harbour would provide significant employment opportunities of full-time roles for locals, O'Sullivan said.

"Prior to Covid, one of [the boat builders] was going to the Philippines to attract workers. Leading into Covid, we thought the boat building sector would be really impacted. They were impacted, however they have come back stronger than ever and they are desperate for a workforce going forward."

The town's tourism industry took a hit after the Whakaari eruption, but domestic visitors had helped the region bounce back, she said.

In Kawerau, the PGF poured $19.9m into the Kawerau Pūtauaki Industrial Development - a project turning 113 hectares of iwi land into an industrial zone.

A container terminal and rail hub is also being established, along with roading networks.

Sequal Lumber executive director David Turner believed the zone would provide a sustainable industrial hub.

"It's a long term plan, but that's where we see the future for Kawerau: utilising it's proximity to natural resource, the availability of water and geothermal energy, then connecting Kawerau to the rest of the world through an optimised supply chain," he said.

Kawerau's paper mill closed down last week, costing 160 jobs.

Industrial Symbiosis Kawerau chairperson Jacob Kajavala said the mill's closure showed it was time for the town to diversify.

"Kawerau has had a relatively narrow focus since it's inception. Now we've realised that, yes we have been about wood, but we can be so much more."

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