贵谤辞尘听鈥榮 The Detail, hosted by Emile Donovan
Last month, Ruapehu Alpine Lifts - which runs the Whakapapa and T奴roa ski fields - put itself into voluntary administration. RNZ鈥檚 The Detail looks at why this happened and whether there鈥檚 a future for snow sports in the North Island.
How has it come to this?
John Fisk, from PWC, is one of the administrators.
He says there鈥檚 no simple answer to why RAL has found itself in this position.
鈥淭hese sorts of things build up over time, there鈥檚 a whole range of circumstances that will have come into play to get to this position.
鈥淏ut what essentially happened is the board got to a point where they couldn鈥檛 be confident that they could pay their debts as they fell due,鈥 Fisk says.
In those circumstances, directors have a duty to go into some sort of formal insolvency process if they can鈥檛 see a way back from that insolvency - in this case, they elected to go into voluntary administration.
鈥淧art of our job is to look back at why the company failed and there鈥檚 still work to be done there,鈥 Fisk says.
鈥淭he first obvious issue has been Covid, two seasons where the number of visitors coming to the mountain has been massively impacted by Covid lockdowns - and particularly from the Auckland market - has been hard.
鈥淟aid over that has been three years of a La Nina weather pattern that has been significant, particularly in 2022, because they actually started the season really well, they had a lot of snow, but the rain came along and washed it all away,鈥 Fisk says.
That, again, put a massive strain on cashflow.
鈥淭he last three years have been very hard, but there are also a number of years where the company hasn鈥檛 had sufficient capital to be able to do the maintenance on the mountain that it needs to,鈥 Fisk says.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of older equipment up there, so some of the chairlifts are really nearing the end of their useful life, so there鈥檚 a massive capital expenditure programme...about $25 million that needs to be spent over the next five years, and the board looked at that and said, 鈥榳e can鈥檛 really commit to that, because we don鈥檛 have enough capital to be able to do that鈥, so hence we are where we are today.鈥
How is RAL set up - and how鈥檚 it different to other ski fields?
Unlike other ski fields around the country, which operate as privately-owned companies, RAL is set up as a not-for-profit.
It was established in the 1950s, to cater for the ski clubs at Whakapapa.
鈥淭here are 48 club buildings up on the mountain now and they needed chairlifts to access the ski fields, so the company was really formed to support the clubs to be able to get access to the ski fields,鈥 Fisk says.
Being a not-for-profit makes it hard to raise capital, so season passes and life memberships became an important funding source.
There are also challenges operating in a national park, where there are co-governance arrangements with local iwi.
Fisk says this requires consultation over any changes.
鈥淚f you want to put in a new lift, it鈥檚 not just a case of building it and getting resource consent, there is a consultation process that takes time.鈥
What about climate change?
鈥淎re there ski fields in Alice Springs?鈥 asks Niwa hydrological forecasting scientist Jono Conway.
鈥淵ou absolutely need the cold temperatures to make and maintain that snow through the winter.
鈥淚 think the future of snow is really a matter of timing, and also what path the world takes in terms of reducing emissions.鈥
But with snow, Conway draws a contrast with shrinking glaciers.
鈥淯nlike glaciers, they have memory from year to year and can鈥檛 survive on a few good seasons, seasonal snow is a fresh slate every year, so you can have a worst year ever and then next year have the best year ever.鈥
And three years of La Nina have certainly made things worst.
鈥淩ain is snow鈥檚 worst enemy... it鈥檚 not only not snow, it鈥檚 not adding to the snow, and it鈥檚 also melting it,鈥 Conway says.
Fisk says climate change is having an impact - and it鈥檚 one of the reasons why RAL has invested in snow-making.
He says there鈥檚 still scope to have a ski field on Ruapehu, moving higher up and across the mountain.
鈥淭here is still good snow and the height is very similar to some of our ski fields down south.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not as if in the next five years or something you鈥檙e going to have no skiing there, but it is changing.鈥 - RNZ
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