Kayangel

Kayangel (Ngcheangel) is the northernmost state of Palau  86 km north of Koror. The land area is about 1.4 km2. The population is 54 (2015 census). There is one hamlet in the state - Orukei, which is also its capital. In 2020, Richard Ngiraked was elected governor of the state.

History
The state was colonized by Spain from the end of the 16th century until 1899 when the territory was sold to the German Empire. This situation would continue until the First World War when Japan took control of the atolls. The United States would rule the area from World War II until the independence of Palau

The Palau Parliament passed a joint resolution in January 2005 supporting a 2002 agreement between the Kayangel State and Palau Pacific Energy Inc. (PPE) in 2002, granting the oil company exclusive rights to explore, drill and produce oil in the surrounding marine area for a specified period of time. Initially, the Palau government had opposed this on environmental grounds, but then bowed to a 2003 petition by Kayangel State residents in favor of exploration.

Typhoon Haiyan
In 2013 Typhoon Haiyan left its wake of destruction on the island, causing Kayangel to be flooded in its entirety, and all homes were destroyed. No fatalities were reported, but 69 people were affected by this cyclone.

Demography
The population of the state was 54 in the 2015 census and median age was 37.5 years. The official languages of the state are Palauan and English. Rdechor is the title of the traditional high chief from the state.

Political system
The state of Kayangel, with population of less than 60, has an elected chief executive, governor. The state also has a legislature elected every four years. The state population elects one of the member in the House of Delegates of Palau.

Geography
The state consists of three atolls in different states of development:

Kayangel Atoll
Kayangel Atoll (Ngcheangel), the only inhabited atoll of Kayangel State, with most (99 percent) of the land area of Kayangel State, is located at 8.06667°N, 134.7°W, about 35 km north of Babelthuap island, the main island of Palau, but only 3 km north of Babelthuap's barrier reef. The atoll is about 7.2 km north-south, and 3.7 km wide, with a total area of 20 km2, including the lagoon. The lagoon has an average depth of 6 m and a maximum depth of 9.6 m, and about 25 large pinnacles can be detected from aerial photographs. The bottom of the lagoon is largely sand. On the western side of the atoll, there is a small passage for boats into the lagoon, with a depth of only 2 to 4 m, called Ulach. Coral diversity and abundance are low in the lagoon. Large fish, dolphins and foraging sea turtles are common near the pass.

There are four densely wooded islets on the eastern and southern rim of the oval-shaped atoll, from north to south, are Kayangel, Ngeriungs, Ngerebelas and Orak.

Kayangel Islet
Kayangel Islet (also called Ngcheangel or Ngajangel), is the largest and only inhabited islet of Kayangel Atoll and Kayangel State. It is 2570 m long north–south, with a width between 270 m in the south and 700 m in the north. The land area is about 98 ha. There are five villages primarily oriented to the western shore (lagoon side). They stretch over 1.5 km from north to south and are not clearly separated from each other. The villages are very small by any standard, given the aggregate population of only 138. Together, they make up the state capital, Kayangel (Ngcheangel). From north to south:


 * 1) Orukei
 * 2) Dilong
 * 3) Doko (with 130 m long pier to the west into the lagoon)
 * 4) Olkang
 * 5) Dimes

The only power on the island comes from solar panels or personal generators. There is one small school that goes from K-9th grades and a small library. The only shopping to be done on the island is from a small general store, otherwise it is what the islanders catch in the ocean or grow in the ground. There are several ways to get to the island. One is the island's speedboat that takes about two hours, but it is generally in for repairs. The more reliable modes are from either a local fisherman or a dive company that makes regular trips up to the island to dive off the reefs surrounding the island.

Ngeriungs Islet
Ngeriungs Islet, about 820 m south of Kayangel Islet, is 1350 m long north–south, and has a width between 130 m in the south and 380 m in the north, which amounts to a land area of 27 ha. There is a small campsite. The islet has been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports a large population of Micronesian megapodes.

Ngerebelas Islet
Ngerebelas Islet, close to the southern tip of Kayangel atoll, about 1200 m southwest of the southwestern tip of Ngeriungs Islet, has a size of 400 m east-west by 370 m north-south, with a land area of 12 ha.

Orak Islet
Orak Islet, at the southern tip of Kayangel atoll, about 290 m southwest of the southwestern end of Ngerebelas Islet, is 210 m long southwest–northeast, and 90 m wide. With an area of 1.5 ha, it is the smallest of the four islets of Kayangel Atoll.

Ngaruangel Reef
Ngaruangel (Ngaruangl) Reef, located at 8.16667°N, 134.63333°W, is an incipient atoll, 8.7 km northwest of Kayangel atoll, and separated from it by Ngaruangl Passage, a very deep (629 to 786 m at 2 km from each atoll) and 8 km wide passage. The atoll is 5.4 km long north–south, and from 1.8 km wide in the north to 3.7 km in the south, and about 3 km on the average. The total area including the lagoon is 15 km2. The lagoon is shallow, with an average depth of 6 m, has about 115 pinnacle and patch reefs, and a boat passage through the northeastern part of the barrier reef. The lagoon floor is covered with thick sand deposits and thickets of staghorn Acropora. The reef is protected by Ngaruangel Reserve.

Ngaruangel Island
There is one small, barren and uninhabited islet, Ngaruangel Island, in the center of the eastern rim of the atoll, at its easternmost point. Ngaruangel Island is 200 m long north–south, and from 65 m wide in the south to 105 m in the north. There is a sand spit attached to the island, pointing southwest into the lagoon, 75 m long and 20 m wide. The total area of the island is 1.5 ha.

The islet consists almost entirely of pieces of rough coral rock thrown up by surf. Most of the pieces are rough or sharp and are largely of the Acropora reticulata type, or of similar form. Sand and sandy gravel are limited to the lagoon side and the southern tip. The altitude is a little less than one meter above high tide. There is no vegetation on the islet. Animal life is represented by numerous marine crane flies. Terns are abundant.

Velasco Reef
Velasco Reef, located at 8.34139°N, 134.6125°W is a sunken atoll north of Ngaruangl Reef, rising steeply from the surrounding seafloor, 2000 m deep. It is not clearly separated from Ngaruangl Reef and appears as its large but submerged northern extension on satellite images. It extends more than 30 km to the north, and is up to 14 km wide, giving it an oval shape, covering an area of about 330 km2. Much of the reef is uncharted. The central depression (lagoon) is 31 to 55 m deep, while depths along the rim (outer edges) range from 11.9 to 22 m (generally 15 to 20 m), on which there are overfalls when the tidal currents are strong. Heavy wave exposure limits coral diversity and cover on Velasco Reef.

Education
The Ministry of Education operates public schools.

JFK Kayangel Elementary School was built in 1965; initially students took classes in a bai. It relieved the schools in Babeldaob as Kayangel students previously attended those schools. Ngaraard Elementary School in Ngaraard formerly served Kayangel.

Palau High School in Koror is the country's only public high school, so children from this community go there.