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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Final load of sugar from Kauai sails into the sunset


By Paul Curtis
The Garden Island

LIHUE — The end of Kauai processed sugar officially came around 4 p.m. yesterday, when the transport ship Moku Pahu left Nawiliwili Harbor with the sugar from Gay & Robinson’s final harvest.

The Moku Pahu, owned by Hawaiian Sugar & Transportation Cooperative, carried about 16,000 tons — or half a load.
The ship is a bulk cargo carrier — as opposed to a container ship, such as Matson Navigation Company’s container ships — and when the cooperative is not using the vessel to transport sugar, it time-charters the vessel to third parties to transport goods worldwide.
Now, it will only transport sugar from the remaining plantation in the state, HC&S on Maui.
It has carried cargo as varied as scrap metal, fertilizer, coal and also various grains, in addition to raw sugar. Matson manages the vessel, said Linda Howe, spokesperson for Matson parent company Alexander & Baldwin, Inc.
The Moku Pahu can carry up to 34,000 tons of sugar or equivalent dry weight of other goods, she said.
In addition to the well-chronicled end of sugar on Kauai, the last loads of sugar and molasses hauled by A&B subsidiary Kauai Commercial Company means the KCC drivers hopefully can be assigned other duties, Howe said.
The end of sugar on the island “does impact hauling operations on Kauai,” she said.
“You could say it’s the end of Gay & Robinson sugar because the last harvest left the island,” said E. Alan Kennett, G&R manager.
“I feel really sad. It was quite a traumatic day,” said Kennett. “It was a very sad day.”