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Quang Ngai province
Tỉnh Quảng Ngãi
—  Province  —
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LocationVietnamQuangNgai
Location of Quảng Ngãi within Vietnam
Coordinates:
Country File:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam
Region South Central Coast
Capital Quảng Ngãi
Government
 • People's Council Chair Phạm Đình Khối
 • People's Committee Chair Nguyễn Xuân Huế
Area
 • Total {{infobox settlement/metric
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  |metu=km2
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Population (April 1, 2009)
 • Total 1,217,159
 • Density {{infobox settlement/metric
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Demographics
 • Ethnicities Vietnamese, Hrê, Co, Xơ Đăng
Time zone ICT (UTC+7)
Calling code 55
ISO 3166 code VN-29
Website quangngai.gov.vn

Quảng Ngãi (About this sound listen) is a province in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam, on the coast of South China Sea. It is located 883 km south of Hanoi and 838 km north of Hồ Chí Minh City.

History[]

The ancient Sa Huỳnh culture inhabited what is now Quảng Ngãi. Remains of it were found in Sa Huỳnh, Đức Phổ district. Within Champa, the region that is now Quảng Ngãi was less significant than Quang Nam Province and Vijaya. There are only a few Cham remains in the province.[1] The area became part of Vietnam along with Vijaya (Bình Định province) in 1471. In the early 19th century the Long Wall of Quảng Ngãi was constructed in the province. It improved security among the Vietnamese and H're people and facilitated trade.[2]

Quảng Ngãi province was one of the first provinces in central Vietnam (together with Quảng Trị) to organize self defense units in March 1945. The Ba Tơ Guerrilla Unit mobilized tens of thousands of peasants.[3] It was known as an NLF (Vietcong) stronghold during the Vietnam War and was the site of the infamous Binh Hoa massacre (1966), the Dien Nien-Phuoc Binh Massacre (1966) and the My Lai Massacre (1968), as well as Operations Malheur I and Malheur II and Operation Quyet Thang 202. The province produced famous war literature on both sides of the conflict: The now-famous wartime diary of NLF medic Đặng Thùy Trâm was written here, and from an American perspective, Quảng Ngãi province is the major setting of Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried.

Administration[]

Quảng Ngãi is divided into 13 districts:

  • Ba Tơ
  • Bình Sơn
  • Đức Phổ
  • Minh Long
  • Mộ Đức
  • Nghĩa Hành
  • Sơn Hà
  • Sơn Tây
  • Sơn Tịnh
  • Tây Trà
  • Trà Bồng
  • Tư Nghĩa
  • Lý Sơn (island district)

The city of Quảng Ngãi is its own municipality.

Geography[]

Quảng Ngãi's topography is dominated by a large plain along the coast and in the center of the province and by mountains and hills in the west and along its borders with Quảng Nam and Bình Định provinces. Lowlands extend further inland along Trà Khúc River.[4] The province's highest peak is at 1630m in the west of the province near the border to Quảng Nam.[5] The coastline is relatively straight in most of the south and central part of the province (unusual for the South Central Coast), but features several capes north of Quảng Ngãi City.[4] The province' largest river is the Trà Khúc. Other important rivers are the Trà Bồng in the north and the Ve River in the south of the province. The Lý Sơn islands belong to Quảng Ngãi. Script error: No such module "Namespace detect".[citation needed]

Economy[]

Quảng Ngãi's GDP per capita was 7.82 million VND in 2007, making it the second poorest province in the South Central Coast (after Ninh Thuận), due to weaknesses in all major sectors of the economy (agriculture, industry, services).[6] However, Quảng Ngãi's economy has been booming since then, due to a spectacular increase in industrial GDP from the Dung Quat Economic Zone. It grew by 21% in 2009, increasing GDP per capita to 15.2 million VND, higher than that of its neighbours, Quảng Nam and Bình Định provinces.[7] Exports increased from 31 million US$ in 2005 to 182 million in 2009.[7]

The number of employed people increased from 571,400 in 2000 to 704,700, despite a significant decline agricultural and fishing employment. The booming industrial sector created 63,200 jobs in the period and employs 99,200 as of 2007. Despite lacking behind the industrial sector in terms of value-added, the service sector employed 180,500 people in 2007 compared to 57,900 in 2000.[7]

Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing[]

Quang Ngai farmer

Farmer in Quảng Ngãi province

Despite its large agricultural area, Quảng Ngãi's agricultural GDP is low compared to other provinces in the region. Rice cultivation takes up the largest area, concentrated around Quảng Ngãi City.[4] 381,200t of rice were harvested in 2007.[8] Other important crops include sugar-cane, peanuts, and coconuts. There is a large number of cattle in the province (287,800 in 2007)[8], mostly in the northwest and southwest.[4]

Crop Area Output (2007)[8] % of national[6] Main Location(s)[4]
Sugar-cane 7300ha 390,900t 2.25 Binh Son District
Peanuts 5700ha 11,100t 2.2 Duc Pho District
Coconuts 2700ha 13,726t 1.31 Mo Duc District

Quảng Ngãi's fishing output as share of total national output is larger than its population share. It benefits from Ly Son Island. However, in contrast to the rest of the region, there is a lack of rich fishing grounds off the coast of Quảng Ngãi province.[4]

Industry[]

Quảng Ngãi City is a secondary industrial center of the South Central Coast with processing of agricultural products and production of some paper and machinery.[4] Other products include beer (38.3 million litres in 2007), textiles (5577 pieces), bricks (303 million), chemical fertilizer (24kt), and hand farming tools (352,000 pieces). Furniture is produced in Quảng Ngãi as a major export product, accounting for 11.475 million US$ in 2007.[8]

Industrial GDP has more than tripled between 2000 and 2007, growing by an average yearly rate of 18.64%.[6] This was the second highest growth rate in the South Central Coast after Bình Thuận Province. Industry has grown even faster since then, due in large part to the Dung Quat Economic Zone. The Dung Quat refinery, Vietnam's first oil refinery, started production in February 2009. In the same year, industrial gross output increased by 144.7% and the share of industry in the province's GDP surged from 36.2% in 2008 to 46.3% in 2009.[7] This share is higher than that of other provinces in the region and even slightly higher than that of Đà Nẵng. The province's prospects for industry may also be changing outside Dung Quat Economic Zone. Vinatex bought Đại Cát Tường, a formerly bankrupt textile manufacturer, in 2011 and plans to expand its production in Quảng Ngãi significantly.[9]

Quảng Ngãi's industry was dominated by the state sector (mostly centrally managed companies) until 2005, after which most of the state industry was (officially) privatized. The state sector's share decreased from 2/3 in 2000 to around 1/8 in 2007, while there was also a restructuring within the state sector from central state to locally managed state enterprises.[8]

Infrastructure[]

Transport[]

National Road 1A and the North-South Railway run through the province. The main railway station is the Quảng Ngãi Railway Station. National Road 24 connects Quảng Ngãi to Kon Tum in the Central Highlands. It has its starting point at Thach Tru on National Road 1A 28km south of Quảng Ngãi City and passes through Ba Tơ District.[10] The nearest airport is Chu Lai International Airport, just north of Quảng Ngãi province. The province has a major port in the Dung Quat Economic Zone, namely Dung Quat Port, in the north of the province. Sa Ky is a local port north of Quảng Ngãi City. It serves as a fishing and small cargo port and has regular ferry connections to Ly Son Island.

Energy[]

There is a hydroelectric station on Tra Khuc River in the center of the province. It is located near the border of Son Ha District with Tu Nghia District and Son Thinh District.[5] As of 2007, 401 million kwh were generated in the province.[8]

Demography[]

The province had a population of 1,219,200 in 2009.[7] Around 40% is concentrated in Quảng Ngãi City and the two districts just north and south of it (Sơn Tịnh and Tư Nghĩa), where population density ranges from over 500 to 3600/km2). Population density in most of coastal Quang Ngai is around 400/km2. The five western districts have population densities of less than 100/km2, three of them (Tây Trà, Sơn Tây, and Ba Tơ) even less than 50/km2.[5] Quang Ngai is the least urbanized province of the South Central Coast, with only 14.4% of the population living in cities and towns.[6] The population grew by an annual average of 1% between 2000 and 2007, while the growth of the urban population was 3.9% on average, one of the highest rates in the region.[6]

The coastal lowlands are mostly ethnically homogeneous, with almost the entire population (>99%) made up of Kinh people. There are large Hrê communities in the southwest of the province. They made up the majority of the population in the districts of Ba Tơ, Sơn Hà (which then also included Sơn Tây), and Minh Long as of 1996.[11] A slight majority in Trà Bồng District (which then also included the Tây Trà District) were Co people.[11] There is also a small minority of Xê Đăng in Sơn Hà District.[11]

Disease outbreak[]

In April 2012, there have been multiple reports of an outbreak of an unknown fatal disease in the area around Ba Tơ. See Quang Ngai skin disease outbreak for more details.

References[]

  1. Hardy, Andrew, Nguyen Van Ku & Ngo Van Doanh (2005): Peregrinations into Cham Culture, Hanoi: The Gioi Publishers
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  3. Lockhart, Greg (1989). Nation in Arms - The Origins of the People's Army of Vietnam, Sydney: Asian Studies Association of Australia in association with Allen & Unwin, pp. 119, 139-140
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Atlat Dia li Viet Nam (Geographical Atlas of Vietnam). NXB Giao Duc, Hanoi: 2010
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Viet Nam Administrative Atlas. Cartographic Publishing House, Hanoi 2010
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 calculations based on General Statistics Office (2009): Socio-economical Statistical Data of 63 Provinces and Cities. Statistical Publishing House, Hanoi
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Binh Dinh Statistics Office (2010): Binh Dinh Statistical Yearbook 2009. Statistical Publishing House, Hanoi
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 General Statistics Office (2009): Socio-economic Statistical Data of 63 Provinces and Cities, Vietnam. Statistical Publishing House, Hanoi
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. Vietnam Road Atlas (Tập Bản đồ Giao thông Đường bộ Việt Nam). Cartographic Publishing House (Vietnam), 2004
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 General Statistics Office (1996): Population Data of Sparsely Populated Areas in Vietnam. Statistical Publishing House, Hanoi

External links[]

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