Provinces of Vanuatu

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Updates: 

I added data from the final 2009 census report (source [3]).

Sorin Cosoveanu points out that Vanuatu has municipalities which are not properly part of any of the provinces. They are Port Vila (established 1980), Luganville (1982), and Lenakel (2008). The first two are indeed reported separately in the census. I, along with the standards, have lumped each of them in with the provinces of which they are capitals.

International standard ISO 3166-2 was published on December 15, 1998. It superseded ISO/DIS 3166-2 (draft international standard). For Vanuatu, the draft standard showed eleven provinces. However, in 1994 the country was reorganized. The final standard shows the six new provinces, with their new codes. Change 2 to FIPS PUB 10-4, dated March 1, 1999, also shows this reorganization.

Country overview: 

Short name VANUATU
ISO code VU
FIPS code NH
Language English (en), French (fr)
Time zone +11
Capital Port Vila

 

At the beginning of the 20th century, the New Hebrides were an Anglo-French protectorate. On 1906-02-27 an agreement was reached making them a condominium of Britain and France. Thus they remained, until they attained independence on 1980-07-30 and took the name of Vanuatu.

Other names of country: 

  1. Bislama: Ripablik blong Vanuatu (formal)
  2. Danish: Vanuatu
  3. Dutch: Vanuatu, Republiek Vanuatu (formal)
  4. English: Republic of Vanuatu (formal), New Hebrides (obsolete)
  5. Finnish: Vanuatu
  6. French: Vanuatu m, Nouvelles Hébrides fp (obsolete)
  7. German: Vanuatu n
  8. Icelandic: Vanúatú
  9. Italian: Vanuatu
  10. Norwegian: Vanuatu, Republikken Vanuatu (formal)
  11. Portuguese: Vanuatu n (m in Brazil), República f de Vanuatu (formal)
  12. Russian: Республика Вануату (formal)
  13. Spanish: Vanuatu, República f de Vanuatu (formal)
  14. Swedish: Vanuatu
  15. Turkish: Vanuatu Cumhuriyeti (formal)

Origin of name: 

native phrase for "our land"

Primary subdivisions: 

Vanuatu is divided into six provinces.

Province HASC ISO FIPS Population Area(km.²) Area(mi.²) Capital
Malampa VU.ML MAP NH16 36,727 2,808 1,084 Lakatoro
Pénama VU.PM PAM NH17 30,819 1,204 465 Longana
Sanma VU.SN SAM NH13 45,855 4,262 1,646 Luganville
Shéfa VU.SE SEE NH18 78,723 1,507 582 Port Vila
Taféa VU.TF TAE NH15 32,540 1,632 630 Isangel
Torba VU.TR TOB NH07 9,359 867 335 Sola
6 provinces 234,023 12,281 4,742
  • HASC: Hierarchical administrative subdivision codes.
  • ISO: Province codes from ISO 3166-2. For full identification in a global
    context, prefix "VU-" to the code (ex: VU-SAM represents Sanma).
  • FIPS: Codes from FIPS PUB 10-4, a U.S. government standard.
  • Population: 2009-11-16 census (source [3]).
  • Capitals provided by Karem Abdalla.

Further subdivisions:

See the Councils of Vanuatu page.

Territorial extent: 

Under each province, I list the pre-1994 councils that correspond to it, followed by the islands belonging to each council. Alternate names given in parentheses are usually older or rarer forms of the island name.

  1. Malampa: Ambrym includes Ambrym (Ambrim) island; Malakula includes Malakula (Malekula), Tomman (Ur), and the Maskelyne Islands; Paama includes Paama and Lopévi islands.
  2. Pénama: Aoba/Maéwo includes Aoba (Oba) and Maéwo (Aurora) islands. Pentecôte includes Pentecôte (Pentecost) islands.
  3. Sanma: Santo/Malo includes Santo (Espíritu Santo; Marina), Malo, Aoré, Tutuba, Mavéa, Lathi (Sakao), and other islands.
  4. Shéfa: Éfaté includes Éfaté (Vate), Nguna, Moso (Verao), Lélépa, Émao (Mau), and other islands. Épi includes Épi island. Shepherd includes the Shepherd Islands: Tongoa, Émaé (Mai), Tongariki, Makura, Mataso, and others.
  5. Taféa: Taféa includes Erromango, Tanna, Anatom (Aneityum), Aniwa, and Futuna islands.
  6. Torba: Banks/Torres includes the Banks Islands (Santa María (Gaua), Vanua Lava, Mota Lava (Saddle), Uréparapa (Norbarbar), Vatu Rhandi, etc.) and the smaller Torres Islands (Hiu, Tégua, Toga, and Loh).

The UN LOCODE page  for Vanuatu lists locations in the country, some of them with their latitudes and longitudes, some with their ISO 3166-2 codes for their subdivisions. This information can be put together to approximate the territorial extent of subdivisions.

Change history: 

  1. 1906-02-27: New Hebrides became a condominium, or joint colony, of England and France.
  2. Source [5] (1951) shows New Hebrides divided into fourteen islands. It's not clear whether these are considered administrative divisions.
Island Population
Ambrym 4,537
Aoba 5,000
Api 3,009
Efate 5,497
Erromango 444
Espiritu Santo 4,000
Gaua  
Maewo  
Malekula 6,680
Paama 2,629
Pentecost 4,500
Tana 5,837
Tonoa  
Vanua Lava  
14 islands 47,892
  • Population: 1946 estimates of
    native population. Total is from
    1946 census of non-natives.

 

Source [6] (1964) says that there are four districts, without mentioning any names. Source [2] contains a map dated 1970-11, showing New Hebrides divided into four districts (List A). Accompanying text says that they were subdivided into 13 local councils as of 1966. Source [4] shows a set of four districts with different names (List B), but with the same territory, except for the placement of Épi Island. Épi is in Malékoula on List A but in Central No. 1 on List B. FIPS PUB 10, as early as 1973, lists four districts with the same names as List B. I hypothesize that the districts changed from List A to List B in ~1968, but that it took a few years before the Office of the Geographer changed the map.

List A List B FIPS Capital Became
Efaté Central No. 1 NH01 Port Vila (Vila) Éfaté, Épi, Shepherd
Malékoula Central No. 2 NH02 Lamap, Malakula I. Ambrym, Malakula, Paama, Pentecôte
Santo Northern NH03 Luganville Aoba/Maéwo, Banks/Torres, Santo/Malo
Tanna Southern NH04 Lenakel Taféa
  • List A: district name according to Geographic Report No. 16.
  • List B: district name according to New International Atlas.
  • FIPS: code according to FIPS PUB 10
  • Became: island councils formed from this district (according to List B)
  1. (Note: Vila is now more often known as Port Vila—usually Port-Vila in French.)
  2. 1980-07-30: New Hebrides became independent and took the name Vanuatu.
  3. ~1985: Districts of Vanuatu eliminated and replaced by eleven island councils. The new division is shown on the CIA map dated 1989-09; in a FIPS code update dated 1991-01-17; and in the 1990 edition of the Rand McNally International Atlas.
Council HASC FIPS Dist Prov Population Area(Km.²) Capital
Ambrym VU.AM NH05 NH02 VU.ML 7,170 663 Eas, Ambrym I.
Aoba/Maéwo VU.AO NH06 NH03 VU.PM 10,902 653 Longana, Aoba I.
Banks/Torres VU.BA NH07 NH03 VU.TR 5,985 820 Sola, Vanua Lava I.
Éfaté VU.EF NH08 NH01 VU.SE 30,422 1,076 Port Vila, Éfaté I.
Épi VU.EP NH09 NH01 VU.SE 3,611 455 Ringdove, Épi I.
Malakula VU.MA NH10 NH02 VU.ML 19,298 2,060 Lakatoro, Malakula I.
Paama VU.PA NH11 NH02 VU.ML 1,695 33 Liro, Paama I.
Pentecôte VU.PR NH12 NH02 VU.PM 11,336 439 Loltong, Pentecôte I.
Santo/Malo VU.SM NH13 NH03 VU.SN 23,984 3,892 Luganville, Espíritu Santo I.
Shepherd VU.SH NH14 NH01 VU.SE 3,965 86 Morua, Tongoa I.
Taféa VU.TA NH15 NH04 VU.TF 22,376 1,701 Isangel, Tanna I.
11 councils 140,744 11,878
  • HASC: Hierarchical administrative subdivision codes. If periods are replaced by
    hyphens, these are the same as the council codes from ISO/DIS 3166-2.
  • FIPS: Codes from FIPS PUB 10-4.
  • Dist: FIPS code for former district to which this area belonged under the condominium
    (see table above).
  • Prov: Code for the province formed in 1994 from this council, keyed to the table at top.
  • Population: 1989-05-16 census.
  • Area: You may note that the areas of the old provinces don't quite agree with the new
    ones. Sources don't usually explain how their areas were measured. One source may
    include inland water, or tiny islands neglected by another. The country may have
    recomputed its cadastral records.
  • Capital: Name of city, followed by the island it's on.

 

1994: Vanuatu reorganized from eleven island councils to six provinces. Each new province was formed by merging one or more island councils. The new province names are acronyms for the former councils that were merged to make them. For example, MALAMPA is the union of MALakula, AMbrym, and PAama.

Population history:

Province 1967-05-28 1979-01-15 1989-05-16 1999-11-16 2009-11-16
Malampa 17,407 23,567 28,174 32,705 36,727
Pénama 13,968 18,937 22,281 26,646 30,819
Sanma 12,785 19,423 25,542 36,084 45,855
Shéfa 17,633 26,860 38,023 54,439 78,723
Taféa 12,436 17,506 22,414 29,047 32,540
Torba 3,481 4,958 5,985 7,757 9,359
Total 77,710 111,251 142,419 186,678 234,023

 

Note: Data from before 1994 are proleptic. Census data for 1967 and 1979 come from source [3].

Sources: 

  1. [1] 2009 Census Household Listing Counts , Vanuatu National Statistics Office (retrieved 2010-07-31).
  2. [2] Geographic Report No. 16, Office of the Geographer, Department of State, 1971-10-27.
  3. [3] Vanuatu National Statistics Office. 2009 National Population and Housing Census, Basic Tables Report, Volume 1  (retrieved 2011-03-28).
  4. [4] Rand McNally New International Atlas, 1969 and 1980 editions.
  5. [5] Encyclopædia Britannica World Atlas, 1951 edition.
  6. [6] Encyclopædia Britannica World Atlas, 1964 edition.
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