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Human population projections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Estimated global human population
1. World population growth 1700–2100, 2022 projection
World population by age group from 1950 to 2100 (projected)[1]

Human population projections are attempts toextrapolate howhuman populations will change in the future.[2] These projections are an important input toforecasts of the population's impact on this planet and humanity's future well-being.[3] Models of population growth take trends inhuman development and apply projections into the future.[4] These models use trend-based-assumptions about how populations will respond to economic, social and technological forces to understand how they will affectfertility andmortality, and thuspopulation growth.[4]

The 2022 projections from theUnited Nations Population Division (chart #1) show that annual world population growth peaked at 2.3% per year in 1963, has since dropped to 0.9% in 2023, equivalent to about 74 million people each year, and could drop even further to minus 0.1% by 2100.[5] Based on this, the UN projected that the world population, 8 billion as of 2023[update], would peak around the year 2084 at about 10.3 billion,[6] and then start a slow decline, assuming a continuing decrease in the global averagefertility rate from 2.5 births per woman during the 2015–2020 period to 1.8 by the year 2100 (the medium-variant projection).[7][8]

However, estimates outside of the United Nations have put forward alternative models based on additional downward pressure on fertility (such as successful implementation of education and family planning goals in theUnited Nations'Sustainable Development Goals) which could result in peak population during the 2060–2070 period rather than later.[4][9]

According to the UN, all of the predicted growth in world population between 2020 and 2050 will come fromless developed countries and more than half will come fromsub-Saharan Africa.[10] Half of the growth will come from just eight countries, five of which are in Africa.[7][8] The UN predicts that the population of sub-Saharan Africa will double by 2050.[10] The Pew Research Center observes that 50% of births in the year 2100 will be in Africa.[11] Other organizations project lower levels of population growth in Africa, based particularly on improvement in women's education and successful implementation of family planning.[12]

2.World Population Prospects, 2022 projection[13]

During the remainder of this century, some countries will see population growth and some will see population decline. For example, the UN projects thatNigeria will gain about 340 million people, about the present population of the US, to become the third most populous country, andChina will lose about half of its population.[7][8]

Even though the global fertility rate continues to fall, chart #2 shows that because ofpopulation momentum the global population will continue to grow, although at a steadily slower rate, until the mid 2080s (the median line).

The main driver of long-term future population growth on this planet is projected to be the continuing evolution offertility andmortality.[4]

History of population projections

[edit]

Projections of global human population are generally based on birth rates and death rates, and since these are difficult to predict very far into the future, forecasts of global population numbers and growth rates have changed over time.

19th century

[edit]

In 1831, president of Yale collegeJeremiah Day included a United States population estimate as an example of anexponential equation. After stating that the 1820 population of the United States was 9,625,000, the projected 2020 population would be 2,464,000,000 (supposing it to double once every 25 years).[14]

20th century

[edit]

Walter Greiling projected in the 1950s that world population would reach a peak of about nine billion in the 21st century and then stop growing after an improvement inpublic health inless developed countries.[15]

In 1992, the United Nations published five projections of long-term world population growth. According to their medium projection, the world population would grow to 10.0 billion by 2050, 11.2 billion by 2100, and 10.8 billion by 2150.[16]

21st century

[edit]

Estimates published in the early 2000s tended to predict that the population of Earth would stop increasing around 2070.[17] For example in a 2004 long-term prospective report, theUnited Nations Population Division projected that world population would peak at 9.2 billion in 2075 and then stabilize at a value close to 9 billion out to as far as the year 2300.[18]

Jørgen Randers, one of the authors of the seminal 1972 long-term simulations inThe Limits to Growth, offered an alternative scenario in a 2012 book, arguing that traditional projections insufficiently take into account the downward impact of global urbanization on fertility. Randers' "most likely scenario" predicted a peak in world population in the early 2040s at about 8.1 billion people, followed by decline.[19]

In 2012, the UN changed its prediction to the effect that no maximum would likely be reached in the 21st century, and that by the year 2100 world population would increase to somewhere in the range 9.6 to 12.3 billion with 10.9 billion being the midpoint of that range.[20] The main reason for the revision was a recognition that the high fertility rate inAfrica was not declining as fast as had been previously assumed.[21]

Another 2014 paper by demographers from several universities, using data from the UN's 2014 report and their own statistical methods, forecast that the world's population would reach about 10.9 billion in 2100 and continue growing thereafter.[22]

In 2017 the UN predicted that global population would reach 11.2 billion by 2100 and still be growing then at the rate of 0.1% per year.[23]In 2019 it was updated to 10.9 billion by 2100 and still growing.

The 2022 revision of the UN'sWorld Population Prospects report[24] represents a departure from the pattern of the previous ten years, it was the first to project a peak in the 21st century. It expected that a slowing of the population growth rate will lead to a population peak of 10.4 billion in 2086 in the medium scenario, after which it would then begin to slowly fall. This shift from earlier projections of peak population and predicted date of zero population growth comes from a more rapid drop in Africa's birth rate than previous projections had expected.[25] For example, the 2012 report predicted that the population of Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, would rise to 914 million by 2100; the 2022 report lowers that to 546 million, a reduction of 368 million; the 2024 report lowered that further to 477 million, a reduction of 69 million.[20][8][25] Jose Rimon of Johns Hopkins University suggested, "We have been underestimating what is happening in terms of fertility change in Africa. Africa will probably undergo the same kind of rapid changes as east Asia did."[25]The 2024 edition brought the peak forward to 2084, with the population topping at 10.3 billion.[26]

A table based on UN World Population Prospects reports, using the medium fertility scenario:

Revision yearPeak population yearPeak population, billionPopulation in 2100, billion
2004[27]20759.29.1
2012[28]2100s10.9
2015[29]2100s11.2
2017[30]2100s11.2
2019[31]2100s10.9
2022[32]208610.410.4
2024[33]208410.310.2

Drivers of population change

[edit]

The population of a country or area grows or declines through the interaction of three demographic drivers: fertility, mortality, and migration.[3]

Fertility

[edit]
Map of countries by fertility rate (2023), according to thePopulation Reference Bureau

Fertility is expressed as thetotal fertility rate (TFR), a measure of the number of children on average that a woman will bear in her lifetime. Withlongevity trending towards uniform and stable values worldwide, the main driver of future population growth will be the evolution of the fertility rate.[34]

Where fertility is high, demographers generally assume that fertility will decline and eventually stabilize at about two children per woman.[3]

During the period 2015–2020, the average world fertility rate was 2.1 children per woman, about half the level in 1950–1955 (5 children per woman). In the medium variant, global fertility is projected to decline further to 2.0 in 2045–2050 and to 1.8 in 2095–2100.[34][35]

Mortality

[edit]

If themortality rate is relatively high and the resultinglife expectancy is therefore relatively low, changes in mortality can have a material impact on population growth. When the mortality rate is low and life expectancy has therefore risen, a change in mortality has much less of an effect.[3]

Becausechild mortality has declined substantially over the last several decades,[3] globallife expectancy at birth, has risen from 48 years in 1950–1955 to 67 years in 2000–2005, is expected to keep rising to reach 77 years in 2045–2050 and 83 years in 2095–2100. In the more developed regions, the projected increase is from 76 years during the period 2000–2005 to 84 years during the period 2045–2050 and 90 in 2095–2100. Among the less developed countries, where life expectancy during the period 2000–2005 was just under 66 years, it is expected to be 76 years in 2045–2050 and 81 years by 2100.[36][37]

Migration

[edit]
Main article:International migration

Migration can have a significant effect on population change. Global south–south migration accounts for 38% of total migration, and global south–north for 34%.[38] For example, the United Nations reports that during the period 2010–2020, fourteen countries will have seen a net inflow of more than one million migrants, while ten countries will have seen a net outflow of similar proportions. The largest migratory outflows have been in response to demand for workers in other countries (Bangladesh, Nepal, and the Philippines) or to insecurity in the home country (Myanmar, Syria, and Venezuela). Belarus, Estonia, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Russia, Serbia, and Ukraine have experienced a net inflow of migrants over the decade, helping to offset population losses caused by a negativenatural increase (births minus deaths).[39]

World population projections

[edit]
Estimates of population levels in differentcontinents between 1950 and 2050, according to the United Nations (2011 edition). The vertical axis islogarithmic and is in millions of people.

This section describes near-term population changes, up to the year 2050, and long-term population changes, out to the year 2100.

Up to 2050

[edit]

The median scenario of the UN's 2022 World Population Prospects predicts the following populations by region in 2050 compared to population in 2000 and shows the differing growth rates for each over the first half of this century.[40]

Projected regional population (billions)
20002050Growth
Asia3.725.28+42%
Africa0.822.47+201%
Europe0.730.70-4%
Latin America & the Caribbean0.520.73+40%
Northern America[a]0.310.43+39%
Oceania0.030.06+100%
World6.139.66+58%
UN estimates (as of 2024) for world population by continent

in 2000 and in 2050 (pie chart size to scale):[40]
     Asia     Africa     Europe     Latin America     Northern America     Oceania

After 2050

[edit]

Projections of population beyond the year 2050 tend to vary depending on the organization making them because each make their own assumptions of the drivers of population change: fertility, mortality and migration.

United Nations projections

[edit]

The UN Population Division report of 2022 projects world population to continue growing after 2050, although at a steadily decreasing rate, to peak at 10.4 billion in 2086, and then to start a slow decline to about 10.3 billion in 2100 with a growth rate at that time of -0.1%.[8]

This projected growth of population, like all others, depends on assumptions about vital rates. For example, the chart below shows that the UN Population Division assumes that the total fertility rate (TFR), which has been steadily declining since 1963, will continue to decline, at varying paces depending on circumstances in individual regions, to a below-replacement level of 1.8 by 2100. Between now (2020) and 2100, regions with a TFR currently below this rate, for example Europe, will see their TFR rise. Regions with a TFR above this rate will see their TFR continue to decline.[35][34]

Total Fertility Rate for Six Regions and the World, 1950-2100

Other projections

[edit]

Other organizations have published different forecasts.

  • A 2020 study published byThe Lancet from researchers funded by theGlobal Burden of Disease Study promotes a lower growth scenario, projecting that world population will peak in 2064 at 9.73 billion and then decline to 8.8 billion in 2100. This projection assumes further advancement ofwomen's rights globally. In this case, the TFR is assumed to decline more rapidly than the UN's projection, to reach 1.7 in 2100.[41]
  • An analysis from theWittgenstein Center predicts global population to peak in 2070 at 9.4 billion and then decline to 9.0 billion in 2100.[42]
  • The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) project lower fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) in 2100 than the UN. By 2100, the UN projects the population in SSA will reach 3.8 billion, IHME projects 3.1 billion, and IIASA projects 2.6 billion. IHME and IIASA incorporate women's educational attainment in their models of fertility, and in the case of IHME, also consider met need for family planning.[12]

Other assumptions can produce other results. Some of the authors of the 2004 UN report assumed thatlife expectancy would rise slowly and continuously. The projections in the report assume this with no upper limit, though at a slowing pace depending on circumstances in individual countries. By 2100, the report assumed life expectancy to be from 66 to 97 years, and by 2300 from 87 to 106 years, depending on the country. Based on that assumption, they expect that rising life expectancy will produce small but continuing population growth by the end of the projections, ranging from 0.03 to 0.07 percent annually. The hypothetical feasibility (and wide availability) oflife extension by technological means would further contribute to long term (beyond 2100) population growth.[43][44][45]

Evolutionary biology also suggests that thedemographic transition may reverse itself and global population may continue to grow in the long term.[46] In addition, recent evidence suggests birth rates may be rising in the 21st century in the developed world.[47] Some researchers, such as Jane N. O'Sullivan, contend that many recent population projections have underestimated population growth. She notes that in the last decades, "support for family planning has waned, and global fertility decline has decelerated as a result".[48]

Growth regions

[edit]

The table below shows that from 2020 to 2050 and beyond to 2100, the bulk of the world's population growth is projected to take place inAfrica. Of the additional 1.9 billion people projected between 2020 and 2050, 1.2 billion will be added in Africa, 0.7 billion in Asia and zero in the rest of the world. Africa's share of global population is projected to grow from 17% in 2020 to 25% in 2050 and 38% by 2100, while the share of Asia will fall from 60% in 2020 to 55% in 2050 and 45% in 2100.[7][8] The strong growth of the African population will happen regardless of the rate of decrease of fertility, because of the high proportion of young people already living today, who arein, or approaching, their fertile years. For example, the UN projects that the population ofNigeria will surpass that of theUnited States by about 2050.[8]

Projected regional populations
Region20202050Change
2020–50

(bn)

2100Change

2020–2100

(bn)

bn% of
Total
bn% of
Total
bn% of
Total
Africa1.3172.525+1.23.938+2.6
Asia4.6605.355+0.74.745+0.1
Other1.9231.9200.01.817-0.1
More Developed1.3171.3130.01.212-0.1
Less Developed6.5838.487+1.99.288+2.7
World7.81009.7100+1.911.2100+2.6

The population of the More Developed regions is slated to remain mostly unchanged, at 1.2-1.3 billion for the remainder of the 21st century. All population growth comes from the Less Developed regions.[7][8]

The table below breaks out the UN's future population growth predictions by region[7][8]

Projected annual % changes in population for three periods in the future
Region2020–25

(%/yr)

2045–50

(%/yr)

2095–2100

(%/yr)

Africa2.51.70.4
Asia0.70.2-0.2
Europe-0.1−0.3−0.3
Latin America & the Caribbean0.70.2−0.5
Northern America0.50.20.1
Oceania1.20.70.2
World0.90.5-0.1

The UN projects that between 2020 and 2100 there will be declines in population growth in all six regions, that by 2100 three of them will be undergoing population decline, and the world will have entered a period of global population decline.

Most populous nations by 2050 and 2100

[edit]
See also:List of countries by past and projected future population
Population of the present-day top seven most-populous countries, 1800 to 2100. Future projections are based on the 2024 UN's medium-fertility scenario. Chart created byOur World In Data in 2024.

The UN Population Division has calculated the future population of the world's countries, based on current demographic trends. The UN's 2024 report projectsworldpopulation to be 8.1 billion in 2024, about 9.6 billion in 2050, and about 10.2 billion in 2100. The following table shows the largest 15 countries by population as of 2024, 2050 and 2100 to show how the rankings will change between now and the end of this century.[49]

Projected population growth of the top 15 countries in 2024, 2050, and 2100
CountryPopulation (millions)Rank
202420502100202420502100
India1,4511,6801,505111
China1,4191,360633222
Pakistan251372511543
Nigeria233359477654
Democratic Republic of the Congo1092184311585
United States345381421336
Ethiopia1322253671077
Indonesia283320296468
Tanzania6913026322159
Bangladesh17421520981010
Egypt117162202131111
Brazil2122171637912
Angola3874150422713
Sudan5085137302114
Mexico131149130111215
Russian Federation14513612691317
Philippines115134114141419
Japan12410577121732
World8,1629,66410,180

From 2024 to 2050, the eight highlighted countries are expected to account for about half of the world's projected population increase:India,Nigeria, theDemocratic Republic of the Congo,Pakistan,Ethiopia,Tanzania,Egypt, andIndonesia.[49]

Population projections of the largest metropolitan areas

[edit]

Largeurban areas are hubs of economic development and innovation, with larger cities underpinningregional economies and local and globalsustainability initiatives. As of 2016, 757 million people live in the 101 largest cities;[50] these cities are home to 11% of the world's population.[50] By the end of the century, the world population is projected to grow, with estimates ranging from 6.9 billion to 13.1 billion;[50] the percentage of people living in the 101 largest cities is estimated to be 15% to 23%.[50]

The following 101 metropolitan areas with the largest population projections for the years 2025, 2050, 2075, and 2100, according to professors Daniel Hoornweg and Kevin Pope, are listed below.[50]

Projected populations in millions
RankCityPop. 2025CityPop. 2050CityPop. 2075CityPop. 2100
1JapanTokyo36.40IndiaMumbai42.40Democratic Republic of the CongoKinshasa58.42NigeriaLagos88.30
2IndiaMumbai26.39IndiaDelhi36.16IndiaMumbai57.86Democratic Republic of the CongoKinshasa83.53
3IndiaDelhi22.50BangladeshDhaka35.19NigeriaLagos57.20TanzaniaDar es Salaam73.68
4BangladeshDhaka22.02Democratic Republic of the CongoKinshasa35.00IndiaDelhi49.34IndiaMumbai67.24
5BrazilSão Paulo21.43IndiaKolkata33.04BangladeshDhaka46.22IndiaDelhi57.33
6MexicoMexico City21.01NigeriaLagos32.63IndiaKolkata45.09SudanKhartoum56.59
7United StatesNew York City20.63JapanTokyo32.62PakistanKarachi43.37NigerNiamey56.15
8IndiaKolkata20.56PakistanKarachi31.70TanzaniaDar es Salaam37.49BangladeshDhaka54.25
9ChinaShanghai19.41United StatesNew York City24.77EgyptCairo33.00IndiaKolkata52.40
10PakistanKarachi19.10MexicoMexico City24.33PhilippinesManila32.75AfghanistanKabul50.30
11Democratic Republic of the CongoKinshasa16.76EgyptCairo24.03AfghanistanKabul32.67PakistanKarachi49.06
12NigeriaLagos15.80PhilippinesManila23.55SudanKhartoum30.68KenyaNairobi46.66
13EgyptCairo15.56BrazilSão Paulo22.82JapanTokyo28.92MalawiLilongwe41.38
14PhilippinesManila14.81ChinaShanghai21.32KenyaNairobi28.42MalawiBlantyre40.91
15ChinaBeijing14.55PakistanLahore17.45United StatesNew York City27.92EgyptCairo40.54
16ArgentinaBuenos Aires13.77AfghanistanKabul17.09IraqBaghdad24.39UgandaKampala40.14
17United StatesLos Angeles13.67United StatesLos Angeles16.42MexicoMexico City24.18PhilippinesManila39.96
18BrazilRio de Janeiro13.41IndiaChennai16.28PakistanLahore23.88ZambiaLusaka37.74
19IndonesiaJakarta12.36SudanKhartoum16.00EthiopiaAddis Ababa23.81SomaliaMogadishu36.37
20TurkeyIstanbul12.10TanzaniaDar es Salaam15.97IndiaChennai22.21EthiopiaAddis Ababa35.82
21ChinaGuangzhou11.84ChinaBeijing15.97IndiaBengaluru21.31IraqBaghdad34.10
22JapanOsaka-Kobe11.37IndonesiaJakarta15.92BrazilSão Paulo21.28United StatesNew York City30.19
23RussiaMoscow10.53IndiaBengaluru15.62ChinaShanghai21.05ChadN'Djamena28.81
24PakistanLahore11.37ArgentinaBuenos Aires15.55NigerNiamey20.37NigeriaKano28.28
25ChinaShenzhen10.20IraqBaghdad15.09UgandaKampala20.23YemenSanaa27.21
26IndiaChennai10.13IndiaHyderabad14.61IndiaHyderabad19.94PakistanLahore27.05
27FranceParis10.04AngolaLuanda14.30AngolaLuanda19.65IndiaChennai25.81
28United StatesChicago9.93BrazilRio de Janeiro14.29United StatesLos Angeles18.51JapanTokyo25.63
29IranTehran9.81KenyaNairobi14.25NigeriaKano17.69IndiaBengaluru24.77
30South KoreaSeoul9.74TurkeyIstanbul14.18IndonesiaJakarta17.55NigeriaIbadan23.68
31IndiaBengaluru9.72EthiopiaAddis Ababa13.21IndiaAhmedabad16.93AngolaLuanda23.55
32PeruLima9.60ChinaGuangzhou13.00YemenSanaa16.69IndiaHyderabad23.17
33ColombiaBogotá9.60IndiaAhmedabad12.43BrazilRio de Janeiro16.56MaliBamako22.95
34ChinaWuhan9.34BangladeshChittagong12.21ArgentinaBuenos Aires16.40MexicoMexico City22.22
35ChinaTianjin9.24United StatesChicago11.93BangladeshChittagong16.04SenegalDakar21.18
36IndiaHyderabad9.09VietnamHo Chi Minh City11.86SomaliaMogadishu15.94MozambiqueMaputo21.07
37United KingdomLondon8.62PeruLima11.57ChinaBeijing15.78ChinaShanghai20.79
38ThailandBangkok8.33ColombiaBogotá11.56Ivory CoastAbidjan15.52Burkina FasoOuagadougou20.63
39Hong KongHong Kong8.31ChinaShenzhen11.20MalawiLilongwe15.32MadagascarAntananarivo20.53
40ChinaChongqing8.28FranceParis11.12MalawiBlantyre15.06United StatesLos Angeles20.01
41AngolaLuanda8.24ThailandBangkok11.08IndiaPune14.91BrazilRio de Janeiro19.84
42VietnamHo Chi Minh City8.15IranTehran11.00NigeriaIbadan14.81IndiaAhmedabad19.71
43IraqBaghdad8.06IndiaPune10.92TurkeyIstanbul14.68Ivory CoastAbidjan19.70
44SudanKhartoum7.94Ivory CoastAbidjan10.71SenegalDakar14.56BrazilSão Paulo19.12
45IndiaAhmedabad7.74NigeriaKano10.44ZambiaLusaka14.52BangladeshChittagong18.82
46BangladeshChittagong7.64ChinaWuhan10.26ChadN'djamena14.48NigeriaAbuja18.58
47AfghanistanKabul7.18RussiaMoscow10.24VietnamHo Chi Minh City14.22RwandaKigali18.30
48ChileSantiago7.03JapanOsaka-Kobe10.19MaliBamako13.54IndonesiaJakarta18.22
49IndiaPune6.80ChinaTianjin10.15United StatesChicago13.44IndiaPune17.32
50VietnamHanoi6.75YemenSanaa10.05ChinaGuangzhou12.84GuineaConakry17.32
51BrazilBelo Horizonte6.75VietnamHanoi9.83ThailandBangkok12.55ArgentinaBuenos Aires16.99
52ChileSantiago6.31United KingdomLondon9.75IndiaSurat12.51ChinaBeijing15.58
53Saudi ArabiaRiyadh6.28South KoreaSeoul9.47PeruLima12.44VietnamHo Chi Minh City15.53
54United StatesMiami6.27Hong KongHong Kong9.47MadagascarAntananarivo12.40TurkeyIstanbul14.79
55ChinaDongguan6.16UgandaKampala9.43EgyptAlexandria11.99EgyptAlexandria14.72
56ChinaShenyang6.16IndiaSurat9.17ColombiaBogotá11.89Democratic Republic of the CongoLubumbashi14.66
57EthiopiaAddis Ababa6.16ChinaChongqing9.09VietnamHanoi11.79United StatesChicago14.54
58United StatesPhiladelphia6.13NigeriaIbadan8.75NigeriaAbuja11.75IndiaSurat14.53
59Ivory CoastAbidjan6.03EgyptAlexandria8.73Burkina FasoOuagadougou11.70Democratic Republic of the CongoMbuji-Mayi14.20
60CanadaToronto5.95SenegalDakar8.52FranceParis11.64KenyaMombasa14.01
61SpainMadrid5.94MyanmarYangon8.44ChinaShenzhen11.06CambodiaPhnom Penh13.88
62KenyaNairobi5.87Saudi ArabiaRiyadh8.09MozambiqueMaputo10.92NigeriaKaduna13.20
63MyanmarYangon5.87MaliBamako7.63GuineaConakry10.63VietnamHanoi12.87
64IndiaSurat5.70United StatesMiami7.53Hong KongHong Kong10.41PeruLima12.81
65TanzaniaDar es Salaam5.69ChileSantiago7.49IranTehran10.36ChinaGuangzhou12.68
66EgyptAlexandria5.65IndiaKanpur7.39MyanmarYangon10.26ThailandBangkok12.14
67TurkeyAnkara5.50United StatesPhiladelphia7.36ChinaWuhan10.13FranceParis11.86
68United StatesDallasFort Worth5.42MadagascarAntananarivo7.26IndiaKanpur10.09IndiaKanpur11.73
69MexicoTlaquepaque5.37BrazilBelo Horizonte7.19United KingdomLondon10.09YemenAl Hudaydah11.51
70MexicoTonalá5.37PakistanFaisalabad7.11ChinaTianjin10.03Hong Kong11.46
71MexicoZapopan5.37CanadaToronto7.04RwandaKigali9.79MoroccoCasablanca11.42
72ChinaChengdu5.32NigeriaAbuja6.94PakistanFaisalabad9.73LiberiaMonrovia11.21
73ChinaXi'an5.23IndiaJaipur6.91Democratic Republic of the CongoLubumbashi9.57ColombiaBogotá11.20
74SpainBarcelona5.18Burkina FasoOuagadougou6.90RussiaMoscow9.51NigeriaBenin City11.14
75United StatesAtlanta5.15NigerNiamey6.79IndiaJaipur9.43EgyptGiza11.00
76ChinaGuiyang5.11ChileSantiago6.77Democratic Republic of the CongoMbuji-Mayi9.27PakistanFaisalabad11.00
77SingaporeSingapore5.10ChinaDongguan6.76JapanOsaka-Kobe9.03GhanaAccra10.99
78NigeriaKano5.06China Shenyang6.76Saudi ArabiaRiyadh9.00IndiaJaipur10.95
79United StatesHouston5.05SomaliaMogadishu6.57ChinaChongqing8.98ChinaShenzhen10.92
80MexicoGuadalajara4.97EgyptGiza6.52EgyptGiza8.96YemenTaiz10.82
81MexicoGuadalajara4.97SpainMadrid6.52CambodiaPhnom Penh8.85TogoLomé10.21
82MexicoGuadalupe4.95United StatesDallas-Fort Worth6.51IndiaLucknow8.65IndiaLucknow10.05
83United StatesWashington, D.C.4.89IndiaLucknow6.34KenyaMombasa8.53ChinaWuhan10.00
84AustraliaSydney4.83MexicoTlaquepaque6.22United StatesMiami8.49ChinaTianjin9.90
85ChinaNanjing4.77MexicoTonalá6.22United StatesPhiladelphia8.30CameroonDouala9.68
86ChinaHarbin4.70MexicoZapopan6.22NigeriaKaduna8.26United KingdomLondon9.56
87BrazilPorto Alegre4.63United StatesAtlanta6.19GhanaAccra7.98Saudi ArabiaRiyadh9.40
88United StatesDetroit4.61Democratic Republic of the CongoLubumbashi6.15IndiaNagpur7.86NigeriaPort Harcourt9.40
89IndiaKanpur4.60GuineaConakry6.14CanadaToronto7.81United StatesMiami9.18
90BrazilBrasília4.58United StatesHouston6.06South KoreaSeoul7.67IndiaNagpur9.13
91AlgeriaAlgiers4.50United StatesBoston6.04SyriaAleppo7.37United StatesPhiladelphia8.98
92RussiaSt. Petersburg4.48Democratic Republic of the CongoMbuji-Mayi5.95United StatesDallasFort Worth7.34IraqMosul8.87
93MexicoMonterrey4.41GhanaAccra5.94TogoLomé7.25ChinaChongqing8.87
94YemenSanaa4.38SyriaAleppo5.90LiberiaMonrovia7.08RussiaMoscow8.42
95BrazilRecife4.35United StatesWashington, D.C.5.87CameroonDouala7.07SyriaAleppo8.37
96ChinaChangchun4.34ChinaChengdu5.84YemenAl-Hudaydah7.06CanadaToronto8.33
97IndiaJaipur4.30AustraliaSydney5.82IndiaPatna7.03IndiaPatna8.17
98PakistanFaisalabad4.28MexicoGuadalajara5.76ChileSantiago6.98IranTehran8.17
99AustraliaMelbourne4.24IndiaNagpur5.76United StatesAtlanta6.97JapanOsaka-Kobe8.00
100NigeriaIbadan4.23ChinaXi'an5.75PakistanRawalpindi6.97United StatesDallas-Fort Worth7.93
101SenegalDakar4.23MexicoGuadalupe5.73NigeriaBenin City6.96PakistanRawalpindi7.88

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Northern America consists ofBermuda,Canada,Greenland,Saint Pierre and Miquelon, and theUnited States.

References

[edit]
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