Gough mines $63m deal
BY ALAN WOOD
Relevant offers
Gough Group has secured its biggest machinery order and will deliver 43 pieces of Caterpillar equipment worth a total of $63 million to state-owned coal miner Solid Energy.
The group, long known as Gough Gough and Hamer, is the sole New Zealand agency for the yellow liveried Caterpillar.
The machinery order relates to Solid Energy's agreement with Downer EDi Mining to jointly operate the Stockton Opencast Mine in an alliance arrangement that started last October .
Gough chief executive Karl Smith said the first fleet order of Caterpillar equipment consisted of 27 trucks and seven excavators with the machinery ranging in weight from 35 to 100 tonnes.
The other Caterpillar units supplied to the alliance would include two track type tractors, two wheel loaders, two wheel dozers and graders.
These units would form the core of the new mining fleet operating at Stockton.
The tender was won after a previous contract run by Doug Hood Mining finished.
The alliance wanted a significant improvement in equipment productivity.
"We worked comprehensively from April 2009 all the way to that contract being awarded in October," Smith said.
"We've got a pretty good track record, but of course going through the global financial crisis we had to fight it out left, right and centre with some of our competition to win this."
There were two other fleet equipment tenders underway at Stockton with Gough involved in both of those, Smith said. "Those decisions will be made between April and June of this year, as far as we understand from the Solid Energy board.
"The second fleet would be worth in the magnitude of another $20 million, and then the third fleet [is] yet to be determined but there's quite a lot of civil equipment required as they start expansion on the plateau."
Around 100 Gough staff at Hornby would be involved in reassembling or commissioning the machinery units, which had been received in parts from five countries including the United States, Japan, Belgium and England. The assembly and delivery of the units would continue until June.
"Until they're commissioned and in the dirt up on the plateau we don't get paid," Smith said.
Ten staff would service the machines in Westport.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
Retirement savings go beyond the family home
Mainfreight hurt by Europe 'hiccup'
Opus on prowl to engineer more business
Wellington's Rugby World Cup windfall
Hold-outs block Kerr's ambitions
EPIC fund shareholders learn of $8.8m payout
Christchurch's Holiday Inn to be demolished
Food prices unchanged in January
Kirkaldie & Stains gears up for online future
Activists hacked McCully's emails
CYF kids can't imagine a good childhood
Search after yacht found unmanned off coast
Station robbed as firefighters tackle blaze
Sonny Bill Williams under pressure to face top pro
New 'pot' sneaks on to shelves
Cop mistakes chocolate bar for cellphone
Principal resigns over national standards
Bateman has time to realise All Blacks dream
Rimutaka Incline train dream on hold
Dad plays porn instead of Smurfs at kid's party
Guinness' all time greatest game ending
McClennan shooting for NRL title with Warriors
Dad plays porn instead of Smurfs at kid's party
Black Caps win T20 nailbiter against Zimbabwe
Crusaders without Richie McCaw until April
Houston under water when found
Speaker hits back in technology row
Guinness' all time greatest game ending
TPK travel money to be paid back
Do you think Waitangi Day and Anzac Day holidays should be "Monday-ised"?
Related story: Nats to discuss Mondayising holidays



