The above projections in fact match those of another UN study that outlines just how much the world will change of the next decades due to urbanization.
What came to mind were two books that had an impact on me. The first, Make Room! Make Room!, first published in 1966 and better known by the film adaption, Soylent Green, painted a picture of overcrowded cities and environmental ruin. Timing - 2022, just 7 years from today. A more impactful follow-up is The Population Bomb, published 47 years ago, predicting mass starvation and effectively throwing in the towel. At least it helped catalyze the environmental movement. Fast forward to Elysium, 2013, painting the same dismal picture but at least providing the 'haves' with a way out. This is one scenario, probably top-of-mind for most looking from the outside in.
But there is another, and this is where are article left off, if we plan for and innovate to lift these 4B people into the middle class. It goes without saying that political stability is a must, but there is a bit of a Catch-22 in what comes first - empowerment or stability. One first step is knowledge, and the combination of cellphone coverage (and data, though not tied to a smartphone) and satellite TV (even if a single downlink is shared by a community) is a major step. Broadband is on the horizon, and access to big-data is already making an impact in planning based on the more recent availability of Africa-based fiber landings.
With continual declines in solar panel pricing (figure below), community-driven power becomes viable, a catalyst for lighting (and education), health, clean water, and agriculture. I believe much of this will be at the grass-roots level, and with some international aid, growing foreign investment (from China, the Middle East, and elsewhere) the total energy mix by 2100 will be very different from what was predicted only a decade ago. A chart by China Research, below, captures this best. At the same time, we're in a new age of mechanical innovation focused on power efficiency, low-cost, and low-maintenance. Basically, any electricity generated, water captured, or crops harvested are utilized that much more efficiently.
So yes, I'm optimistic that the 'African Century' won't only lead to 3B new heads to cover and minds and mouths to feed, but it will also provide us with the means to accomplish this.
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