In 2005 the British government announced plans to construct an airport on Saint Helena, which would lead to the withdrawal from service of the RMS
St Helena. The airport was initially expected to be operational by 2010. However, it was not approved until October 2011, with work commencing in 2012. The estimated cost on the project is £240 million and the airport was due to open in the first quarter of 2016. However, due to concerns about
wind shear, on 26 April 2016, the St. Helena Government announced an indefinite postponement to the opening of
Saint Helena Airport. RMS
St Helena had been placed for disposal via London shipbrokers CW Kellock, but was subsequently restored to service. The voyage originally intended as her final one began on 14 June 2016 from the UK and ended on 15 July in Cape Town, calling at Tenerife, Ascension Island and St Helena. As part of its farewell voyage, Royal Mail organised a letter exchange with pupils from Cardiff and St Helena. However, due to the postponed opening of the airport, the schedule of RMS
St Helena was extended as an interim measure. The ship was initially scheduled to run until July 2017, and then February 2018. After the opening of Saint Helena Airport to scheduled passenger flights on 14 October 2017, RMS
St Helena was withdrawn from service, and her last sailing from St Helena Island was on 10 February 2018. The day before the scheduled departure was designated a
public holiday and an open day was held, giving people the opportunity to look around the ship. The ship had to unexpectedly return to St Helena on 12 February due to a
medical emergency on board. which does carry a limited number of passengers, and mail and other express freight by the passenger aircraft. The first passenger on the MV
Helena stated that unlike the RMS
St Helena, the new ship, with a lower capacity, is strictly geared towards cargo, although some former RMS employees had become crew on the new ship. In April 2018,
St Helena was purchased by
MNG Maritime and entered service as a vessel-based armoury in the
Gulf of Oman named
MNG Tahiti to supply weaponry to ships travelling through the
High Risk Area of heightened pirate activity in the Indian Ocean. In October 2018, the vessel was resold to St Helena LLC,
Jersey and in 2019 the ship was refitted to act as a mobile hub for the race events of the
Extreme E electric
SUV racing series. She was used to carry all equipment, including the cars, to the race locations. In July 2025
Terra Nova Expeditions announced they would be operating
St Helena as an expedition cruise vessel, departing on various itineraries from a home port of
Ushuaia, Argentina. The first Antarctic voyage is scheduled to depart in December 2026. As at April 2026 she is under refit and registered in
Djibouti, with undisclosed owners. File:RMS St Helena.jpg|Anchored James Bay, Island of St. Helena File:RMS St Helena - onboard.jpg|Aft Deck of RMS
St Helena File:RMS St Helena London (16358540002).jpg|Life ring ==References==