Treasury Releases Rail Agreement
Treasury Releases Rail Agreement
http://www.treasury.govt.nz/release/rail/
Rail Network PURCHASE: Summary of agreements
The agreement to purchase the rail network was signed on 30 June 2004 and title for the network passed immediately to the Crown. There will be a two month transition period where Toll will continue to manage the network on behalf of the Crown
This note sets out the key features of the agreement that was reached on 30 June. It starts by referencing the Heads of Agreement with Toll signed in July 2003, and summarises how capital requirements beyond the initial non-recoverable Crown payment of $200 million will be funded.
Heads of Agreement
The Heads of Agreement had the following key parameters:
The rail track and all the equipment needed to operate it, along with all track related staff and contracts would pass to the Crown
Toll Rail would pass
back to the Crown its rights over land under the rail lease,
except for land it needed for its continuing rail
operations
A set of specified land and assets,
including Wellington Railway station, some leases, and land
rights where some major reconfiguration was required would
also pass back to the Crown.
The Crown agreed to pay
a nominal $1 for the track assets, and an estimated $50
million, subject to valuation, for the assets in (3)
above.
Toll Rail would be granted exclusive access
for freight, and Wellington metro. Those exclusive access
rights were subject to use-it-or-lose-it provisions. If Toll
Rail’s traffic fell below 70% of the average 2002-2004
freight levels for any line segment it would lose its
exclusive access. Tranz Rail was required to co-operate with
any new operator granted access in such terms. For
Wellington metro the use-it-or-lose-it passenger levels were
based on those in the existing core lease.
The
rights of existing operators on the network (most obviously
Taieri Gorge and Heritage operators) were protected.
Toll Rail was to pay the costs of Trackco through access
charges. The costs would be set through a process of
agreeing Trackco’s budget, subject to an arbitration
provision.
The Crown committed to spend $100 million
on upgrading the network, and $100 million over 4 years on
replacement capital (e.g. line and sleepers). Neither of
these sums was to be recovered from Toll Rail. Toll Rail
committed to spend $100 million on new rolling stock.
Consultation mechanisms were established to enable this
capital spending to be co-ordinated as appropriate, but each
party retained final decision rights over its own
spending.
It was agreed that further capital
expenditure on the track, above this initial $200 million,
would be recovered from rail operators through the track
access charges.
TrackCo would be an independent and
efficiently run entity. In recognition of the fact that
TrackCo’s efficiency was a key input for Toll Rail’s
operation, Toll Rail was to nominate one director for
TrackCo.
There were to be service level agreements
and key performance indicators for both TrackCo and Toll
Rail. A bonus and penalty regime would apply.
Long-distance passenger services were not covered by the Heads as rights for long distance passenger services were held by a third party - Tranz Scenic.