2026 in the Cook Islands
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Events
- Economic growth was expected "to be 2.9% in 2026 in the Cook Islands."[1]
January
- 15 January - Agence France Press reports that a growing "shadow fleet" of Russian and Chinese vessels were registering in the Cook Islands under flags of convenience for as little as a few thousand dollars.[2]
- 19 January - Government and opposition political parties in the Cook Islands traded barbs over each other's leaders "wasting parliament time."[3]
March
- 30 March – Cook Islands News reports that the islands territory only has 20 days of fuel stock due to global supply disruptions caused by the 2026 Iran War.[4]
April
- 2 April:
- New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters and Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown sign a defence and security declaration. Peter also confirmed that New Zealand would resume about NZ$29.8 million in annual aid funding to the islands territory, patching bilateral relations, which has been strained in 2025 by the Cook Islands signing a series of partnership agreements with China.[5]
- The Cook Islands Price Tribunal issues new orders raising the price of diesel on Rarotonga to $3.89 per litre and $3.44 per litre for octane petroleum. Petrol prices in the northern islands approach $5 per litre.[6]
Scheduled
See also
References
- ↑ "Tourism to Continue to Drive Growth in the Pacific, but at a Slower Pace — ADB". Asian Development Bank. 9 April 2025. Retrieved 21 January 2026.
- ↑ "New Zealand warned Pacific neighbour over oil smuggling 'shadow fleet'". France24. Agence France Press. 15 January 2026. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
A "shadow fleet" of 19 tankers suspected of smuggling oil for Russia and Iran was flagged by New Zealand with Cook Islands authorities in 2024, according to a confidential list obtained by AFP.
- ↑ Talaia, Mika (19 January 2026). "Ministers' 'long-winded' answers wasting Parliament time: Heather". Cook Islands News. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
Cook Islands United Party leader Teariki Heather has pushed back against claims that Opposition MPs waste valuable parliamentary question time, arguing instead that the real issue lies with Ministers who fail to give direct answers and consume most of the limited time allocated.
- ↑ Dasalusalu, Losirene (30 March 2026). "Cook Islands down to just 20 days of fuel stock as local suppliers warn of 'significant price increases'". RNZ. Cook Islands News. Archived from the original on 1 April 2026. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
- ↑ Palmer, Russell (2 April 2026). "Winston Peters signs defence and security declaration with Cook Islands PM Mark Brown". RNZ. Archived from the original on 2 April 2026. Retrieved 2 April 2026.
- ↑ McConnell, Glenn (3 April 2026). "Price controls have kept Rarotonga fuel prices in check, but for how much longer?". Stuff. Retrieved 6 April 2026.
- ↑ Mika, Talaia (17 January 2026). "Parliament eyes 31 sitting days before 2026 election". Retrieved 21 January 2026.
Parliament exceeded its legal requirements by sitting for 22 days in 2025 and is projected to sit for 31 days in the first half of 2026 before dissolving for the general election.
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