The Federated States of Micronesia stretch east-west 2700 km in the Western 
pacific north of Papua New Guinea and south of Guam. Ruled by the Spanish until 
sold to Germany in 1899, conquered and ruled by Japan from 1914, then seized by 
the US during the Second World War. They became independent in 1986 under a 
Compact of Free Association with the United States. Nominally an independent 
country, they don't seem to have any legislation mandating either metric or US 
Customary. All speed limits signs are US style White signs with black letter, 
25 mph maximum (about 40 km/h). The Micronesians drive on the Right as in the 
US. However, most vehicles, probably more than 93% from a count in the hotel 
parking lot were RHD (26 vehicles, 2 Left Hand drive both with km/h 
speedometers, 24 were RHD from Japan with km/h only speedometers). Even in many 
Left Hand Drive vehicles the speedometers were in km/h primary, mph secondary. 
One unusual question from our driver was "what are these numbers?" pointing to 
the odometer. All he saw was numbers, he had no idea it was the total distance 
in kilometers the vehicle had traveled. 

 

Micronesia uses the US Dollar. Some stores had kilogram only scales; others had 
combined kg and lb scales. The price of bananas was 80 c/kg in one store, some 
items were priced by the kilogram others by the pound. My driver asked the 
price of bananas and it was stated in cents per kilogram. The weather at the 
airport was: Visibility Statute Miles, wind in knots, pressure in inches of 
Mercury and Temperature in Celsius. They used the Weight of the aircraft in 
Pounds to calculate fees and sold fuel by the US Gallon. 

 

The postal system is run by the US Postal Service but Micronesia issue their 
own Micronesian stamps, I'm not sure how that works, someone brought out a USPS 
sheet to calculate the postage and all weights were in Ounces. Predominantly 
imports are from the US, I did see Liter containers of Milk from Australia and 
One kilogram packs of washing powder from the Philippines.

 

I saw a survey map of Pohnpei on a hotel wall, all heights of the land and 
depths of the ocean were in meters only. I could not find any legislation 
mandating any standard units of measure and observation gives the impression 
there are none.

 

Michael Payne

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