15% of global population lives within a few miles of a coast − and the number is growing rapidly
- Written by Arthur Cosby, Professor of Sociology, Mississippi State University
Coastal populations are expanding quickly around the world. The rise is evident in burgeoning waterfront cities and in the increasing damage from powerful storms and rising sea levels. Yet, reliable, detailed data on the scale of that population change has been hard to pin down, until now.
We study human geography as a sociologist at Mississippi State University[1] and a computer scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory[2]. Using newly available[3] data from Oak Ridge[4] that combines census results, satellite images and data science techniques, we were able to track growth patterns of coastal populations around the world.
The results show a striking pattern[5]: The largest number of people by far – about 10% of the global population – live within 5 kilometers (3.1 miles) of the coast, and another 5% of the world’s people live between 5 and 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) from the coast. In the rings beyond 10 kilometers, the population declines swiftly.
That’s a lot of people
The United Nations estimates that Earth’s population passed 8 billion people[6] in 2022, an increase of 1 billion in just over a decade.
We found that over 2 billion of those people – 29% of the total global population – lived within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of shore[7] in 2018, based on Oak Ridge Laboratory’s publicly available dataset. About half of those inhabitants – over 1 billion people, or about 15% of the global population – lived within 10 kilometers of the water.
If you picture a globe, that means 15% of the world’s population was living on 4% of the Earth’s[8] entire inhabitable landmass.
People are drawn to coastal areas for many reasons. Coastal cities are often economic hubs, meaning job opportunities, access to trade and exposure to bustling communities. These areas also offer access to nature, including fisheries and recreation.
We found that between 2000 and 2018, the global population living within 10 kilometers of the water[9] increased by about 233 million inhabitants – about 28%. That’s equivalent to adding 23 new megacities with 10 million inhabitants each – about twice the size of the Miami metro area[10] – right near the water’s edge.
Costly consequences
Human settlement patterns have profound consequences for people’s exposure to risk, particularly near the coasts.
Rising sea levels contribute to high-tide flooding[11], more extreme storm surge during hurricanes[12] and erosion[13] in regions around the world. In some areas, particularly Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands, rising saltwater has infiltrated farm fields[14] and freshwater sources[15]. Hurricanes and typhoons, which gain strength over warm water, have intensified as temperatures have risen[16].
Coastal ecosystems, including fragile mangroves, wetlands and coral reefs, are also sensitive to the expanding coastal populations[17] and to the infrastructure and pollution[18] accompanying human settlement.
Collectively, about 78% of the coastal growth was on those two continents.
On all of these continents, human population growth along the coast followed a similar pattern[26]: The highest concentrations of inhabitants are in the bands closest to shore, decreasing rapidly as they move inland. Given the great differences among the cultures, economies and histories of the continents, it is remarkable to find consistent human population patterns.
Coastal regions are hubs of economic activity and infrastructure development, often playing critical roles in national and global economies. However, the rapid population growth is accelerating human and environmental risks.
Understanding these coastal population growth patterns is fundamental to addressing this global challenge.
References
- ^ sociologist at Mississippi State University (scholar.google.com)
- ^ computer scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (scholar.google.com)
- ^ available (energy.gov)
- ^ data from Oak Ridge (landscan.ornl.gov)
- ^ results show a striking pattern (doi.org)
- ^ Earth’s population passed 8 billion people (www.un.org)
- ^ lived within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of shore (doi.org)
- ^ living on 4% of the Earth’s (doi.org)
- ^ population living within 10 kilometers of the water (doi.org)
- ^ Miami metro area (censusreporter.org)
- ^ contribute to high-tide flooding (theconversation.com)
- ^ storm surge during hurricanes (theconversation.com)
- ^ erosion (theconversation.com)
- ^ saltwater has infiltrated farm fields (theconversation.com)
- ^ freshwater sources (doi.org)
- ^ intensified as temperatures have risen (doi.org)
- ^ sensitive to the expanding coastal populations (iris.who.int)
- ^ infrastructure and pollution (theconversation.com)
- ^ Social Science Research Center, Mississippi State University; data from LandScan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (www.ssrc.msstate.edu)
- ^ CC BY (creativecommons.org)
- ^ LandScan Global project (landscan.ornl.gov)
- ^ estimate the magnitude and growth patterns (doi.org)
- ^ strongest growth patterns on two continents (doi.org)
- ^ four of the five most populated countries (www.census.gov)
- ^ Ulrich Hollmann/Moment via Getty Images (www.gettyimages.com)
- ^ followed a similar pattern (doi.org)
Authors: Arthur Cosby, Professor of Sociology, Mississippi State University