Skip to content
Sponsored

World Cities Adding One Million People Every Week

Sponsored
mex_city.jpg


Syndicated columnist Neal Peirce asks whether our planet will be able to absorb the population “mega-surge” currently underway in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

From Common Dreams:

The problem is that the global population base has increased so radically that even seemingly modest birthrates can have momentous consequences. Joel Cohen (head of the Laboratory of Populations at the Rockefeller University and Columbia University) calculates that if we do add 2.5 billion people by 2050, and virtually all the increase, as expected, goes into poor countries’ cities, then the world will have to build one city of one million people every week for the next 43 years. “Is this,” he asks, “feasible — physically, environmentally, financially, socially?”

One sort of shudders at the answer. But there is a first step: get a handle on growth of the world’s cities. Without that, how can city leaders estimate the peripheral areas they’ll have to urbanize, or, alternatively how much they’ll have to “infill” their current territory with higher density development?

The bottom line is clear: the developing world’s cities — and the developed world’s cities still expanding significantly — must plan early, much more carefully, or expect to be overwhelmed by a virtual growth tsunami.

Good planning, for example, can recycle underused urban land, or schedule better use of expansion areas, to achieve much greater people-carrying capacity. Good planning can avoid some of the worst modern traffic jams, put public transit first, make walking and biking convenient, and preserve pockets of “green” critical to humans’ physical and emotional health.

Photo: Mexico City, by dantebusquets/Flickr

Photo of Jason Varone
Jason Varone battles the streets everyday during a 9 mile commute on his bicycle from downtown Brooklyn to the Upper East Side. In addition to his efforts on Streetsblog, he is an artist making work related to the environment and technology. Examples of his work can be found at www.varonearts.org.
Sponsored

Support Streetsblog

Comments Are Temporarily Disabled

Streetsblog is in the process of migrating our commenting system. During this transition, commenting is temporarily unavailable.

Once the migration is complete, you will be able to log back in and will have full access to your comment history. We appreciate your patience and look forward to having you back in the conversation soon.

More from Streetsblog USA

Friday Video: The H.A.R.D. Fight Against Hit-and-Runs

December 12, 2025

Wednesday’ Headlines Are on Autopilot

December 10, 2025

City Shuts Down Volunteer Crosswalk Painting Event in Los Angeles

December 9, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines Set the Record Straight

December 9, 2025
See all posts