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Damaged irrigation systems exposes lack of effluent backup systems, called a 'disaster' due to serious 'logistical nightmare'

Rural News
Damaged irrigation systems exposes lack of effluent backup systems, called a 'disaster' due to serious 'logistical nightmare'
photo credit Dan/Page Bloomer Assoc.

Content supplied by Irrigation NZ

IrrigationNZ says initial reports suggest more than 800 irrigators across Canterbury are severely damaged and will need to be repaired or written off following Tuesday’s big wind.

“The extent of damage to centre pivots and other irrigators across the region is unprecedented. This is an extremely serious situation as we simply don’t have enough parts to repair all of these machines in New Zealand. We’re looking at a six to eight week time lag before parts arrive and then a similar timeframe before repairs can be completed. If we experience a dry spring, the consequences could be dire for many Canterbury farmers as irrigation will effectively be stymied,” says IrrigationNZ CEO Andrew Curtis.

Gavin Briggs, owner of Rainer Irrigation, says his company alone is aware of 260 centre pivot spans lying on the ground and another 30 pivots across the region that have lost key components.

He describes the situation as “a logistical nightmare”.

“It’s actually quite serious even though we’re still a couple of weeks away from the irrigation season starting. Many farmers don’t have back-up systems for effluent and were relying on centre pivots to do the job. It’s a disaster.”

Rainer Irrigation has ordered a large quantity of parts from overseas suppliers but it could be 60 to 90 days before they arrive.

The company usually employed 30 staff at this time of the year for irrigation repairs, but would double that in the coming months.

Seven cranes were working this week to lift damaged equipment.

Mr Briggs believed irrigation systems close to rivers suffered the most damage as the wind funnelled through river beds “getting a fair bit of speed up”.

While insurance claims would take a while to resolve, his company and others in the industry would move as quickly as possible to repair irrigation infrastructure “because it’s our client’s livelihood and there’s a fair bit of unhappiness out there.”

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11 Comments

Are center pivots covered by insurance in Canterbury? Either way, they sure as hell won't be anymore.

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That is big bikkies. Is that half a billion Andrew? Jeepers you will be right. The insurance companies will run a mile. Some imaginations will berunning wild on the machinations of spreading effluent in the short term.

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Belle, I was mentioning in another thread about a mate in Nth Canterbury who got a lot of wind damage a few years back and there were a lot of irrigators damaged too. He told me he was unable to get insurance against wind damage anymore. Im wondering what's in the fine print regarding cover for wind damage.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_R8GtrKtrZ4

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Seen a few travelling irrigators which seriously lived up to their name , and mangled themselves across paddocks around Cust / Oxford ...much of it appears to be beyond repair

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They dont really look like something that would catch the wind. Crikey, you wouldnt want to be in the near vicinity once they get going. Lucky nobody hurt.

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Not so bad when they are full of water, empty is another matter. Also takes ages to turn then into the wind, someone told me 27k a section to buy. Yep effluent must be getting interesting fast. Poor buggers thank god the payout looks good.

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Windage and resonance has been the death of not a few structures - Tay Bridge V1.0 and the classic resonance failure - Tacoma Narrows.

 

The engineers and lawyers are gonna have a field day (sorry) with all this:  these big blows occur only every 35-50 years, and people forget....

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A design opportunity in all this! 

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Hi, My company Pondco Ltd could provide storage either temporary or perminately, erected in one day. Let me know if we could be of help in this situation. Thanks

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We went through a huge mission of getting them pointing into the wind - resource consent issues meant we couldn't take water to fill them - our solution was to ram in posts and strop the pivots to them. Nothing went over but more through good luck as much as anything else...

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good thinking

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