Sprawl! Is Earth Becoming a Planet of SuperCities?
Imagine a planet dominated by cities like Mega-City One, a megalopolis of over 400 million people across the east coast of the United States, featured in the Judge Dredd comic or "San Angeles," formed from the joining of Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Diego, and the surrounding metropolitan regions following a massive earthquake featured in the 1993 movie "Demolition Man."
Don't hold your breath: the 21st century will soon have 19 cities with populations of 20 million or more.
The history of the human species is a history of migration. In 1000 A.D. Cordova, Spain was the largest city. By 1500, Bejing began its rise to power, and 300 years later it was the first city to be over a million people. By 1900 London emerged the world's supercity with over 6 million people. In 1950 New York was proclaimed the first "megacity" with a population of over 10 million people in the greater metropolitan area.
How is increasing mass urbanization affecting the quality of life? 1.4
million people are moving into cities each week. How will this vast migration change the way we live and die; how we treat the elderly, the poor, the
way work, trade, learn, the way we eat, consume, recycle, power, engineer,
innovate?
"While some say the world is flat, supercities are rising - vast, intensely urban hubs will radically redefine the world's future macroeconomic and cultural landscape. Most of the world's population right now lives and works in cities. Many more will. It's critical to gain a truer understanding of what's happening: the rise of supercities is the defining megatrend of the 21st century," says futurist Richard Saul Wurman, founder of the TED Conference and 19 20 21.org -devoted to the effect of mass urbanization on the planet.
In 1800 only 3% of the world's population lived in cities; 47% by the end of the twentieth century. In 1950, there were 83 cities with populations exceeding one million; by 2007, this had risen to 468 urban areas of more than one million.
If the current trend continues, the
world's urban population will double every 38 years. The UN forecasts
that today's urban population of 3.2 billion will rise to nearly 5
billion by 2030, when three out of five people will live in cities. By 2050 two-thirds of the world’s population will live in cities, up
from about 50% right now.
The world’s population of “slum” dwellers increases by 25 million every year. The majority of these numbers come from the fringes of urban margins, located in legal and illegal settlements with insufficient housing and sanitation. This has been caused by the massive migration, both internal and transnational, into cities.
The greatest population increase will be most dramatic in the poorest and least-urbanized continents, Asia and Africa. Surveys and projections indicate that all urban growth over the next 25 years will be in developing countries, where one billion people, one-sixth of the world's population, now live in slum-level conditions -breeding grounds for crime, drug addiction, alcoholism, poverty and unemployment. By 2030, over 2 billion people in the world will be living in these mega-ghettoes.
In the video below Jon Kamen describes the impact of the rise of the cities in a" flat world." It's a fascinating, if not a pretty picture.
Posted by Casey Kazan.







Cool. Thats a great success for human race. Next step is the space.
Regards,
-rigo.
Posted by: rigo | June 24, 2009 at 03:51 PM
Rome is believed to have had a population of one million before 1 AD.
Posted by: Peter Knight | June 24, 2009 at 06:52 PM
Coruscant is a planet covered by a giant city as well.
Posted by: Tyrone | June 24, 2009 at 06:56 PM
Third-world Earth, here we come! Yahoo?...
Posted by: Cory | June 24, 2009 at 07:56 PM
I recently read a book by Issac Asimov called 'The Caves of Steel' from the Robots series. While science-fiction, it describes nearly exactly the inevitable future that is discussed in this video. The interesting part is that it was written in 1956... 40 years before these studies are being done.
Posted by: seth | June 24, 2009 at 08:04 PM
Generally the phrase, "don't hold your breath", means, "don't expect it".
Posted by: Matt | June 25, 2009 at 07:49 AM
Could space habitation stop this?
Posted by: Aron Sora | June 25, 2009 at 09:05 AM
The only reason I can see for such a large population is emotional energy. Negitive and positive, but emotional energy none the less.
-- May sound a bit far fetched, but what other reason to increase population with out controls?
Posted by: IB | June 25, 2009 at 09:46 AM
we will have been eating soylent green for a while by the time the earth is a city. And Peter Knight and Cory are both on the right track, but any geek will tell you that Asimov wrote of a planet city in the 1950's in the foundation series' planet Trantor.
Posted by: Gary | June 25, 2009 at 10:40 AM
Ha!, forget Judge Dredd!, try StarWars:The CloneWars!, the fictitious planet is a like New York all over the planet!
the planets' name is: Corascant? ring a bell?
of the planet is in a central core of a fictitious galaxy of all places!.
Posted by: Scott Houdek (Orion105) | June 25, 2009 at 10:01 PM
thank you
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Posted by: bitirim | July 06, 2009 at 12:46 AM