Miri Division

Last updated

Miri
Flag of Sarawak.svg
Sarawakmiri.png
Division Office location Miri
Local area government (s) Miri City Council (MBM)
Majlis Daerah Subis (MDS)
Majlis Daerah Marudi (MDM)
Area
  Total26,777.1 km2 (10,338.7 sq mi)
Population
 (2000)
  Total316,400
  Density12/km2 (31/sq mi)
ResidentHj. Mastapa bin Hj. Julaihi
License plate prefixQM

Miri Division is one of the twelve administrative divisions of Sarawak, Malaysia.

Contents

Geography

It has a total area of 26,777.1 square kilometres, and is the second largest division after Kapit Division. The seat of this division is the city of Miri.

Miri Division consists of two districts: Miri and Marudi.

Of the 21 seismic events that happened in Sarawak from 1874 to 2011, the majority of them occurred between Niah and Selangau regions, which corresponds to Miri and Bintulu Divisions with Modified Mercalli intensity scale (MMI) of 3.5 to 5.3 magnitude. [1]

Population

The population of Miri Division (year 2000 census) was 316,400. Ethnically, the population was Iban, Chinese, Malay (mostly Bruneian and Kedayan), Melanau, Kayan, Kenyah, Lun Bawang and Kelabit. Due to the petroleum industry, there is also a large foreign worker population.

Economy

The economy is largely based on petroleum and natural gas extraction from both onshore and offshore wells, and related petroleum refining, liquefied natural gas and chemical production. Another major industry is timber processing from Miri's huge tropical rainforest. Processed wood products, rather than log export has been given priority by the government. Agriculture is includes oil palm, rubber, and pepper as the main products. Tourism, particularly ecotourism, is a growing component of the economy.

Protected areas

Administration

Members of Parliament

ParliamentMember of ParliamentParty
P218 Sibuti YB Tuan Lukanisman Ahmad SauniGPS (PBB)
P219 Miri YB Tuan Michael Teo PH (PKR)
P220 Baram YB Tuan Anyi NgauGPS (PDP)

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References

  1. Halim, Ida Sharmiza A.; Rambat, Shuib; Noh Muhammad, Ramzanee M (2022). "Site-Suitability Analysis on Seismic Stations using Geographic Information Systems" (PDF). Disaster Advances. 15 (2): 1–14. Retrieved 5 April 2024.