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- Growing or shrinking? What the latest trends tell us about . . .
The global population reached nearly 8 2 billion by mid-2024 and is expected to grow by another two billion over the next 60 years, peaking at around 10 3 billion in the mid-2080s
- Worlds population could plummet to 6 billion by the end of . . .
A new model has predicted that Earth's population is likely to decrease in all scenarios across the next century and will peak nowhere near the 11 billion previously forecast
- UN world population projections: 21st century population decline
The world population growth rate has halved from 1 7 per cent in 1950 to 0 8 per cent over the 75 years to 2025 Population growth is projected to end in 2084 and be -0 1 per cent by 2100 The 2024 projections continue a trend of population downgrades in subsequent revisions since 2015 The driver of the UN population projections downgrades is a faster-than-expected decline in global fertility
- Human population projections - Wikipedia
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%
- 5 facts about how the world’s population is expected to . . .
The world's population is expected to peak at 10 3 billion in 2084 and then decline to 10 2 billion through the end of the century
- What Depopulation Will Mean for the World - Bloomberg
What Happens When the World’s Population Starts Shrinking? Plus: Jerome Powell’s future, elderly college students and more Baby cribs at a maternity ward Low birth rate and fertility concept
- A shrinking world will turn our problems upside down
So let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that the projections prove correct and the global population peaks in the mid-2080s at over 10bn, then starts to slowly decline
- Population tipping point could arrive by 2030 - Science | AAAS
The United Nations Population Division, in a 2022 report, put this tipping point at 2056, and earlier this year, the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital, a multidisciplinary research organization dedicated to studying population dynamics, forecasted 2040
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