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'Great Rides' need double the money to keep running smoothly
'Great Rides' need double the money to keep running smoothly

RNZ News

time21-07-2025

  • Business
  • RNZ News

'Great Rides' need double the money to keep running smoothly

The country's Great Rides attract about a million cyclists and walkers each year. File photo. Photo: RNZ / Chris Bramwell Maintenance funding for the country's 'Great Rides' trails will need to double in the next decade, or some will degrade so much they will lose that status. The trails generate just under $1b annually in benefits to regional economies, drawing about a million cyclists and walkers each year. The government puts $8m a year towards the trails through the International Visitor and Conservation Levy, with contributions totalling $129m since 2009. Councils have co-invested at least $60m into the rides in that time. But an Official Information Act response from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, released to RNZ, shows an estimated $160 million will be needed to maintain and enhance the Great Rides over the next 10 years. Per year, it is double the amount currently allocated for the network. "Without additional funding, there is a risk the Great Rides will gradually decline over time, potentially resulting in the removal of Great Ride status from some underperforming trails," the briefing to Tourism Minister Louise Upston says. NZ Cycle Journeys runs cycle hire and luggage transfer services across five of the trails and owner Geoff Gabites told Nine to Noon the trails were "perfectly usable" at the moment, but would need resurfacing soon - the maintenance largely done by local councils, with three trails covered by the Department of Conservation (DOC). He compared that to the 'Great Walks' tramping tracks fully managed by DOC - which owns and manages the huts, thereby collecting an income stream. "On the [Great Rides] trails, there is no mechanism whereby riders themselves can be levied or generate money for the trusts or councils that own the trails," Gabites said. When set up in 2009 under the John Key government, the Great Rides were intended to eventually become self-funding, but the OIA response showed this "has not eventuated as the economic benefits have not flowed back to the trails to allow them to maintain and grow to be a world-class asset". There are no direct revenue-gathering options for the trusts that operate the trails. The problem is exacerbated by trails that have been impacted by severe weather, like the Great Taste Trail in Nelson which will need rebuilding following the recent Tasman floods . "It's that sort of siphoning of money out of the $8m which the government currently fund per annum which is I think causing a significant decline in the ongoing funding available for maintenance," Gabites said. He said given the benefits, it should be on the government to support the maintenance of the trails. "It's hard to actually find a government initiative that has delivered that sort of degree of return, and so you would have to be saying to the government 'this is your investment, and it's really going to be upon you, I believe, to maintain and protect that investment'." They were considerably cheaper than urban-based cycleways to maintain, he said. "In terms of numbers, 48 percent of the riders travel specifically to ride these trails so they're not just 'happen to be there and then go and and do something', it's actually a driver into the region... the $8m that have been granted is the same degree of funding that was in place from, I think, 2018." The government has launched a "programme refresh to respond to this funding pressure", and also has a "full impact evaluation" for the 2024/25 fiscal year under way, scheduled for completion in September. Gabites said tourism operators benefiting from the trail where also were aware they should contribute, and that was being done on a voluntary basis - but it was currently the only way those operators were helping fund the trails. "So Cycle Journeys has had a luggage levy of 15 percent in there, and we've donated something like $126,000 over the last four years - but when the trail maintenance numbers are as high as they are, that's not sufficient to stay ahead of the game." Part of the problem was the lack of any way to charge the users of the trails, and the government's contracts with councils - many of which had a low rating base - left ratepayers to fund the maintenance. "There's multiple entry/exit points, so it's it's just never been set up to do this - and also legislatively as well, there's no mechanism," Gabites said. The MBIE briefing notes the government is exploring differential funding from councils "based on a local government deprivation index similar to that used by the New Zealand Transport Agency to fund roads". James Bell from ski and bike hireage company TCB Ohakune is heavily involved in the town's business community and said everyone including DOC and iwi seemed to be "pitching in where they can and where is necessary", but the trails themselves needed to be completed to make the whole system run smoother. "The biggest challenge right now - and this might sound a bit harsh - is we're currently driving a three-wheeled cart, because that cart isn't complete and therefore working on maintaining a three-wheeled cart is a lot tougher. Makes more sense, at least, for our community, to add that fourth wheel." As an example, many of the trails have been at least partly on-road since the scheme was launched, and the MBIE briefing notes that a $7.9m bid to have 120km of the Alps 2 Ocean ride shifted to off-road was rejected. Bell said there were also other ways to get the maintenance done, like new levies or commissions or through concession agreements. Minister Upston in a statement to RNZ said she was aware of the maintenance issues and cost pressures. "An ongoing challenge is how to generate revenue to reinvest into the trails to ensure they continue to offer a world-class experience. MBIE is currently working with sector partners to refresh the broader Great Rides programme. I'm committed to finding solutions to ensure the future of the Great Rides for Kiwis and international visitors alike," she said. The government has also confirmed plans to spend $3m on adding e-bike charging stations to the trails, with a second round of funding launched in June - however the MBIE briefing noted there was a "low level of support for installing e-charging stations" from stakeholders. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Great rides cycle trails' funding needs to double in a decade
Great rides cycle trails' funding needs to double in a decade

RNZ News

time20-07-2025

  • Business
  • RNZ News

Great rides cycle trails' funding needs to double in a decade

The amount of funding required to keep the country's 23 Great Rides up to scratch will need to double in the next ten years, or some trails will degrade to the point they face losing their 'great ride' status. The rides - which are used equally by cyclists and walkers - were set up in 2009 by Government with the intent of eventually being self-funding. And while the trails' economic benefits to the regions they are in, are exceptional, these benefits do not flow back directly into track maintenance and upgrades. There are no direct revenue-gathering options for the trusts that operate the trails - and earlier this year officials from the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment warned Tourism Minister Louise Upston that the status quo had become unsustainable. An estimated $160 million is required to maintain and enhance the rides, over the next ten years - that's double the amount NZ Cycle Trust is currently allocated from the Government. Geoff Gabites owns NZ Cycle Journeys - a company that runs cycle hire and luggage transfer services across five of the trails, and James Bell who works in Ohakune at the ski and bike hire firm TCB. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

Benefits and opportunities of cycle trails highlighted
Benefits and opportunities of cycle trails highlighted

Otago Daily Times

time02-05-2025

  • Business
  • Otago Daily Times

Benefits and opportunities of cycle trails highlighted

Dunedin risks missing out on a significant tourism boost if it does not connect to Otago's sprawling cycle trail network. During the public forum of this week's meeting, Christchurch-based Cycle Journeys owner Geoff Gabites urged the council not "the throw the baby out with the bath water" when it comes to investing in cycleways. His advice comes after the Dunedin City Council earlier this year removed $22.4 million for the Dunedin Tunnel Trails project from its draft nine-year plan which would have linked Dunedin to the wide Otago cycle network. At the time, Mayor Jules Radich said the cut was part of a $272m cost-saving exercise over the next nine years to reduce pressure on rates. Mr Gabites said over the summer he had cycled Te Aka Otākou and Lawrence-Waihola trails and told the council by not connecting to other trails in the region, Dunedin was turning its back on an opportunity to become a major cycling hub. "My lasting impression was that if I was 20 years younger I would be buying a depot here in Dunedin, ready for the obvious link-up to Mosgiel and also north to Oamaru and the [Alps2Ocean]. "These are low-energy, low-carbon activities which have a very strong engagement with the New Zealand domestic market and attract the 'active relaxer' international tourism market with a focus on slow travel," he said. Mr Gabites said he appreciated the council's efforts to keep rates low and cycle trails were an investment with proven economic and social benefits. Also speaking in the public forum was Dunedin tourism operator Kylie Ruwhiu-Karawana (Ngāpuhi), who said it was "glaringly obvious" Dunedin was a "black hole", with no connection to internationally significant trails around the region. "It's an opportunity we could lean into to really see better, stronger benefits for Ōtepoti Dunedin — socially, culturally environmentally and economically." Trails also presented indigenous people an opportunity to connect to their tīpuna [ancestors], she said. "Many of the trails that you walk on now, my people and many of the indigenous people from around the world have walked those trails for tens of thousands of years beforehand," she said. "The challenge is, from an indigenous perspective, they don't have the ability to walk on the trails their [ancestors] walked on . . . [or] to learn the stories in place."

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