Napier Port dredging starts

Infrastructure

Napier Port is on track to start dredging for 6 Wharf this week, taking the port one step closer to finishing the wharf by the end of 2022.

Heron

6 Wharf will allow the port to reduce congestion and welcome more and larger ships as vessel sizes increase and exports out of the region grow, said the port in their official announcement.

Napier Port general manager infrastructure services Michel de Vos said that the GPK – a backhoe dredge operated by Heron Construction – arrived from Lyttleton yesterday and dredging will start this week.

“The community will be able to see the GPK in the harbor for the next 18 months or so,” said Mr de Vos. “Some dredge plume may be visible as Heron goes about their work. This is sediment from the seafloor and is a normal part of the dredging process.”

Napier Port is monitoring water quality in real-time to ensure the dredging doesn’t harm the marine environment, in particular fisheries and Pania Reef, which is a site of cultural significance and an important breeding ground for kai moana, said the port.

“We’ll be alerted immediately by our monitoring buoys at Pania Reef if turbidity (water quality) is above expected levels and will adapt our operations, or stop, until conditions mean it’s safe to resume,” said Mr de Vos.

The port will deposit most of the dredged material at a consented site 5 kilometres east of the port.