List of maritime features in the Spratly Islands
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This page features a series of lists of maritime features in the Spratly Islands.


Features by area

Of the hundreds of maritime features in the
Spratly Islands The Spratly Islands ( fil, Kapuluan ng Kalayaan; zh, c=南沙群島/南沙群岛, s=, t=, p=Nánshā Qúndǎo; Malay, id, Kepulauan Spratly; vi, Quần đảo Trường Sa) are a disputed archipelago in the South China Sea. Composed ...
, relatively few have land permanently above sea-level that is larger than protruding rocks. There are only 13 islands and cays with a natural area above sea-level larger than one hectare. With the exception of Swallow Reef, prior to 2014 there had been no large-scale land reclamation beyond building breakwaters and piers, and extending runways. This changed dramatically in 2014 with the PRC embarking on large-scale reclamations of the lagoons of
Johnson South Reef Johnson South Reef, also known in Mandarin ; Mabini Reef ( tl, Bahura ng Mabini, lit=Reef of Mabini); vi, Đá Gạc Ma), is a reef in the southwest portion of the Union Banks in the Spratly Islands of the South China Sea. It is controlled by ...
(~10ha) and Fiery Cross Reef (~230ha), and other reclamations of then unknown extent at the
Gaven Reefs The Gaven Reefs, also known in Mandarin and ; Burgos Reefs ( tl, Mga Bahura ng Burgos, lit=Reefs of Burgos); vi, Đá Ga Ven and vi, Đá Lạc, is a group of two reefs in the Tizard Bank of the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea. They ...
and Cuarteron Reef. Reports of the extent of land reclaimed on Swallow Reef vary. The PRC land reclamations have continued on a total of seven sites. In 2015,
Subi Reef Subi Reef, also known as Zamora Reef ( tl, Bahura ng Zamora, lit=Reef of Zamora); Zhubi Reef (Mandarin ); vi, đá Xu Bi, is a reef in the Spratly Islands of the South China Sea located southwest of Philippines' Pag-asa island Thitu Island unde ...
,
Hughes Reef Hughes Reef ( Mandarin , vi, đá Tư Nghĩa) is a reef in Union Banks in the Spratly group of islands, South China Sea claimed by the PRC (China), the ROC (Taiwan), the Philippines, Malaysia, and Vietnam. It is only above water at low tide. ...
and Mischief Reef were added. Refer to the table below for the most recently available data. In summary, there have been reclamations of very large areas (>640 acres = 1 sq mile) at three sites by the PRC, reclamations of large areas (10-100 acres) at 8 sites (4 by PRC, 3 by Vietnam and 1 by Malaysia) and reclamations of lesser areas at a number of sites. There does not appear to have been any reclamation of Philippine occupied areas. There have been small Taiwanese reclamations at Itu Aba, very small but functionally significant reclamations at six Malaysian sites, and a number small but significant reclamations at Vietnamese sites in 2016, most particularly at Spratly Island where the runway has been extended and a sheltered harbour added. The following table contains the 16 largest "natural" features, (i.e. not including reclaimed land), plus the features with significant amounts of reclaimed land:


Features by major reef/bank, etc.

The boundaries of the Spratly Islands are not firmly defined. West-to-east, the islands range from the coastal waters of Vietnam to the east of Dangerous Ground and the Palawan Passage (approx. 106-117°E), and south-to-north from the coastal waters of Borneo and the southern South China Sea to the north of Dangerous Ground and the Reed Bank (approx. 3-12°N). The major feature of the area is Dangerous Ground, an oblong area approximately SW-NE, at its widest, with an area of about 52,000 nm² (178,000 km²). It lies approximately between 7.5–12°N, 113–117°E, and US NGA literatureetc. seems to consider its centre as . The remainder of the Spratly Islands are mainly to the west and south of Dangerous Ground, with some features to the east. The Spratly Islands can be roughly divided into seven sub-areas relative to Dangerous Ground: * NW of Dangerous Ground (approx. 10-12°N, 113-115°E)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=93044 NW of Dangerous Ground * NE Dangerous Ground (approx. 10-12°N, 115-117°E)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=93045 NE Dangerous Ground * SE Dangerous Ground (approx. 7-10°N, 115-117°E)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=93046 Most of the SE of Dangerous Ground. The missing portion of the SE is covered by chart 93048 and the top corner of chart 92006.Chart 93048 (not easily available on-line)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=92006 SE Spratlys, Brunei, North Borneo and Southern Philippines * SW Dangerous Ground (approx. 7-10°N, 113-115°E)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=93047 SW Dangerous Ground * E of Dangerous Ground (approx. 3-12°N, east of 117°E) * S of Dangerous Ground (approx. 3- 7°N, 113-117°E)http://www.oceangrafix.com/chart/zoom?chart=93049 South and West of Dangerous Ground and * W of Dangerous Ground (approx. 3-12°N, west of 113°E) Within these sub-areas there are a number of major reefs and banks, as well as ungrouped maritime features. Starting in the NW, and progressing in a generally SW direction, the features include:


Features by name


Features by occupier and/or claimant

A feature is occupied by a country if one of the following is true: *Soldiers and/or civilian citizens of a country are present in the feature, either by building structures over the feature to house the citizens (most features are of this type) or by manning a ship anchored over the feature (Philippine-occupied Irving Reef is of this type). *Regularly visited by soldiers of a country, not necessarily having soldiers present in it 24 hours. These features must lie near (within ) a feature occupied by the country in the way of the first condition. Presence of structures is not necessary. This is the case of Philippine-occupied Flat Island and Lankiam Cay where soldiers stationed at Nanshan Island and Loaita Island respectively, regularly visit on a daily basis. The effective visible distance of horizon from a 15-meter (typical large structure) height above sea-level is . This makes features occupied by the second condition to be also labeled as "occupied" since they can be guarded far away. However, not all features within the radius can be considered as absolutely occupied. This is especially true for features that lie between and within of two or more features occupied by different countries. (See Virtually Occupied or Controlled table)


Summary


Occupied features


Republic of China (Taiwan)


People's Republic of China


Republic of the Philippines


Socialist Republic of Vietnam


Malaysia

Note that the
Royal Malaysian Navy The Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN, ms, Tentera Laut Diraja Malaysia; TLDM; Jawi: ) is the naval arm of the Malaysian Armed Forces. RMN is the main agency responsible for the country's maritime surveillance and defense operations. RMN's area of op ...
have established 5 Offshore naval stations (Offshore EEZ Stations) on reclaimed land: # 1983: Station Lima ( Swallow Reef) # 1986: Station Uniform ( Ardasier Reef) # 1986: Station Mike ( Mariveles Reef) # 1999: Station Sierra ( Erica Reef) # 1999: Station Papa ( Investigator Shoal)


Brunei

Note that Louisa Reef was controlled by Brunei since 2009


Unoccupied but largely controlled by China


Unoccupied but largely controlled by Vietnam


Unoccupied but largely controlled by the Philippines


Unoccupied but largely controlled by Malaysia


Unoccupied features


Claimed features by country but occupied by other country


Others


Notes


References


External links

* {{South China Sea *