Taio Shipping


Taio Shipping is a shipping company in the Cook Islands. It is the islands main inter-island shipping company, and operates freight and passenger services between Rarotonga and the outer islands, with services once or twice a month to Atiu, Mitiaro, Mauke and Mangaia, once every two months to Penrhyn, Rakahanga and Manihiki, and once every two and a half months to Palmerston and Pukapuka.

History

The company was established in 1991 when Teremoana Tapi Taio purchased a damaged boat, the Acadia, in Rarotonga and obtained a shipping licence.
In September 2005 the Manu Nui ran out of fuel and drifted while travelling from Pukapuka to Rarotonga, after failing to refuel.
In June 2006 Taio Shipping diverted the MV Maungaroa from its usual schedule for a charter for the producers of, causing a fuel and electricity crisis on the island of Mangaia.
In November 2007 the MV Miss Mataroa was scuttled at sea as a means of dumping asbestos sheeting.
In January 2008 the MV Maungaroa was ran aground in Avatiu during a storm.
In October 2010 the MV Te Kou Maru II was stranded on the reef at Mauke. The wreck was left to rust for several years.
In January 2017 the newly-purchased MV Moana Nui was wrecked on a reef in Nassau. An investigation attributed the wreck to lack of a detailed chart, inadequate radio communication, and lack of familiarity with the reef. The wreck was still in place a year later. A contract to salvage and remove the wreck was issue din November 2019.
In September 2019 all of the company's ships were detained by the Cook Islands Ministry of Transport after a child was lost overboard from the MV Lady Moana while travelling from Rakahanga to Rarotonga. A subsequent safety assessment by Maritime New Zealand found significant failings on the company's ships, and as a result the MV Grinna II was approved to carry only 12 passengers while the passenger licences for the MV Maungaroa II and MV Lady Moana were withdrawn. While the ships were detained, the Northern islands ran out of imported food and petrol. In 2020 the MV Maungaroa II was taken out of service pending sale, and a larger vessel, the MV Maungaroa III, was purchased to replace it.

Fleet

Current

Past