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‘The Italians are coming back’ - European firm confirms bid to build Northland Expressway

Author
Thomas Coughlan,
Publish Date
Thu, 13 Mar 2025, 12:35pm
The Northland Expressway will be a four-lane highway similar to this one pictured. Photo / 九一星空无限
The Northland Expressway will be a four-lane highway similar to this one pictured. Photo / 九一星空无限

‘The Italians are coming back’ - European firm confirms bid to build Northland Expressway

Author
Thomas Coughlan,
Publish Date
Thu, 13 Mar 2025, 12:35pm

A large Italian firm has confirmed it will bid to build and run the first 26km stretch of the Northland Expressway, one of New Zealand鈥檚 most expensive road projects. 

Guido Cacciaguerra, the Australia-based head of PPPs for Italian Webuild, a multinational industrial group specialising in construction and civil engineering, confirmed the bid at the Government鈥檚 Infrastructure Investment Summit this morning. 

Cacciaguerra said his firm has a long history in New Zealand. 

鈥淭he Italians are coming back,鈥 he told media at the summit. 

Codelfa-Cogefar, a predecessor firm to Webuild, helped construct tunnels for the Tongariro hydro scheme in the 1960s. 

The Government was so keen for their expertise that it waived Italian pasta, olive oil, and cheese through the strict import restrictions of the time. 

The firm even brought its own cooks to T奴rangi, where the workers were based. According to the company鈥檚 own history, the cooks were the second-best paid workers on the project. 

Webuild is part of a consortium whose bid to build was revealed by Businessdesk this morning. Plenary, an Australian-headquartered infrastructure investor, is another member of the consortium. 

It committed to pursuing at least five public-private partnerships (PPP) opportunities over a five-year timeframe and establishing an office in New Zealand within the next 18 months. 

Plenary managing director Patrick Lauren said Malaysian firm Gamuda was also part of the consortium. He would not disclose local firms. 

Cacciaguerra said Australia was Webuild鈥檚 largest market outside of Europe and it made sense to expand to New Zealand. 

鈥淚鈥檝e been coming to New Zealand for over a year and I think that today was just a confirmation of the consistency鈥 the Government has been very consistent in planning,鈥 he said. 

Perhaps gesturing to the Government鈥檚 Fast-track regime, and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop鈥檚 speech to the summit, promising the Government wanted to make consenting easier, Cacciaguerra said one of the main attractions of New Zealand was that things ran to schedule and projects met deadlines. (Fellow conference attendees Hyundai, late of project iRex, and CPB and HEB, of Transmission Gully might beg to differ). 

鈥淓very time there was a new deadline, that was met,鈥 Cacciaguerra said. 

鈥淭he Northland Corridor is happening, it鈥檚 real鈥 I work with governments around the world and it is very rare to see every time a deadline that is met by the government side,鈥 he said. 

Cacciaguerra said his investment, 鈥渋n terms of debt鈥 would be 鈥渂illions鈥 of dollars, and 鈥渋n terms of equity, hundreds of millions鈥. 

He said Webuild was used to competition, having won tenders to build several of Australia鈥檚 recent PPPs. 

Finance Minister Nicola Willis said there will be money for PPPs announced in the forthcoming Budget and she expected each budget she delivers will have more PPP funding in it. 

Northland ExpresswayNorthland Expressway 

She would not say how much money would be allocated. She warned that PPPs did not mean free money - someone, often the taxpayer, still needed to pay. 

鈥淚t is often missed [that] a public-private partnership doesn鈥檛 mean that a benevolent company will enter New Zealand and build a road for us for free. 

鈥淲hat it means is that they will lend us their expertise and their capital and we will reach a funding agreement with them,鈥 she said. 

Willis added that some funding would be direct from the Crown in the form of money collected in taxes, while other funding could come in the form of new revenue tools. 

All ministers offered to take suggestions on policy options that would make life more accommodating for business in New Zealand, with Regulations Minister David Seymour, Immigration Minister Erica Stanford, joining Bishop and Willis in their overtures. 

Willis used the example of Rocket Lab, which announced it wanted to launch rockets from M膩hia in 2014 and was able to do so by 2017 after a regulatory change from the Government. 

She hinted the Government was open to other changes to encourage the Rocket Labs of the future. 

Thomas Coughlan is Deputy Political Editor and covers politics from Parliament. He has worked for the Herald since 2021 and has worked in the press gallery since 2018. 

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