NOMENCLATURE OF TERRITORIAL UNITS FOR STATISTICS
(Redirected from NUTS III)
The 'Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS)' is a geocode standard for referencing the administrative divisions of countries for statistical purposes. The standard was developed by the European Union, and thus only covers the member states of the EU in detail (see also: Regions of the European Union). Eurostat also devised a hierarchy for the 10 countries that joined the EU in 2004, but these are subject to minor changes. The NUTS divisions do not necessarily correspond to administrative divisions within the country. The acronym is derived from the French name for the scheme, ''nomenclature des unités territoriales statistiques''.
A NUTS code begins with a two-letter code referencing the country, which is identical to the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code (except ''UK'' instead of ''GB'' for the United Kingdom). The subdivision of the country is then referred to with one number. A second or third subdivision level is referred to with another number each. Each numbering starts with 1, as 0 is used for the upper level. In case the subdivision has more than 9 entities, capital letters are used to continue the numbering.
In addition to the full three levels for the European Union countries, all countries have a NUTS code with a two-letter code for a continent and two numbers for the country, and for the USA, Canada and Australia the states and provinces are numbered separately.
There are some anomalies: for example, Gibraltar is listed as being outside the EU with the code EO21; while French Guiana is listed twice, once in France as FR930 and once in South America as AS13.
NUTS is thus in some extent similar to the ISO 3166-2 standard, as well as the FIPS standard of the United States.
There are three levels of NUTS defined, with two levels of local administrative units (LAUs) below that, historically called NUTS levels 4 and 5 and sometimes still described as such. Note that not all countries have every level of division. Luxembourg, for example, has only LAUs; the three NUTS divisions each correspond to the entire country itself.
★ DE: Germany
★
★ DE7: Hesse - The ''Bundesland'' as the top level subdivision of Germany
★
★
★ DE71: Darmstadt region - ''Regierungsbezirk'' as second level
★
★
★
★ DE71E: Wetteraukreis - ''Kreis'' as the third level
★ AA: Asia
★
★ AA25: Thailand
★ US16: Kansas
★ ISO 3166
★ ISO 3166-1
★ ISO 3166-2
★ List of FIPS region codes
★ Correspondence between the NUTS levels and the national administrative units — Eurostat
★ NUTS Statistical Regions of Europe — Eurostat
★ Hierarchical list of the NUTS (EU-15) — Eurostat
★ Hierarchy in EFTA, Accession and Candidate countries — Eurostat
★ List of NUTS codes (World Wide) — European Union
The 'Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS)' is a geocode standard for referencing the administrative divisions of countries for statistical purposes. The standard was developed by the European Union, and thus only covers the member states of the EU in detail (see also: Regions of the European Union). Eurostat also devised a hierarchy for the 10 countries that joined the EU in 2004, but these are subject to minor changes. The NUTS divisions do not necessarily correspond to administrative divisions within the country. The acronym is derived from the French name for the scheme, ''nomenclature des unités territoriales statistiques''.
A NUTS code begins with a two-letter code referencing the country, which is identical to the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code (except ''UK'' instead of ''GB'' for the United Kingdom). The subdivision of the country is then referred to with one number. A second or third subdivision level is referred to with another number each. Each numbering starts with 1, as 0 is used for the upper level. In case the subdivision has more than 9 entities, capital letters are used to continue the numbering.
In addition to the full three levels for the European Union countries, all countries have a NUTS code with a two-letter code for a continent and two numbers for the country, and for the USA, Canada and Australia the states and provinces are numbered separately.
There are some anomalies: for example, Gibraltar is listed as being outside the EU with the code EO21; while French Guiana is listed twice, once in France as FR930 and once in South America as AS13.
NUTS is thus in some extent similar to the ISO 3166-2 standard, as well as the FIPS standard of the United States.
| Contents |
| Levels |
| Examples |
| See also |
| External links |
Levels
There are three levels of NUTS defined, with two levels of local administrative units (LAUs) below that, historically called NUTS levels 4 and 5 and sometimes still described as such. Note that not all countries have every level of division. Luxembourg, for example, has only LAUs; the three NUTS divisions each correspond to the entire country itself.
Examples
★ DE: Germany
★
★ DE7: Hesse - The ''Bundesland'' as the top level subdivision of Germany
★
★
★ DE71: Darmstadt region - ''Regierungsbezirk'' as second level
★
★
★
★ DE71E: Wetteraukreis - ''Kreis'' as the third level
★ AA: Asia
★
★ AA25: Thailand
★ US16: Kansas
See also
★ ISO 3166
★ ISO 3166-1
★ ISO 3166-2
★ List of FIPS region codes
External links
★ Correspondence between the NUTS levels and the national administrative units — Eurostat
★ NUTS Statistical Regions of Europe — Eurostat
★ Hierarchical list of the NUTS (EU-15) — Eurostat
★ Hierarchy in EFTA, Accession and Candidate countries — Eurostat
★ List of NUTS codes (World Wide) — European Union
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