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How megacities are changing the map of the world

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    I want you to reimagine
    how life is organized on earth.
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    Think of the planet
    like a human body that we inhabit.
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    The skeleton is the transportation system
    of roads and railways,
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    bridges and tunnels, air and seaports
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    that enable our mobility
    across the continents.
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    The vascular system that powers the body,
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    or the oil and gas pipelines
    and electricity grids.
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    that distribute energy.
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    And the nervous system of communications
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    is the internet cables,
    satellites, cellular networks
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    and data centers that allow
    us to share information.
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    This ever-expanding infrastructural matrix
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    already consists of 64 million
    kilometers of roads,
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    four million kilometers of railways,
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    two million kilometers of pipelines,
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    and one million kilometers
    of internet cables.
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    What about international borders?
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    We have less than
    500,000 kilometers of borders.
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    Let's build a better map of the world.
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    And we can start by overcoming
    some ancient mythology.
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    There's a saying with which
    all students of history are familiar:
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    "Geography is destiny."
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    Sounds so grave, doesn't it?
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    It's such a fatalistic adage.
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    It tells us that landlocked countries
    are condemned to be poor,
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    that small countries
    cannot escape their larger neighbors,
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    that vast distances are insurmountable.
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    But every journey I take around the world,
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    I see an even greater force
    sweeping the planet:
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    connectivity.
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    The global connectivity revolution,
    in all of its forms --
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    transportation, energy
    and communications --
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    has enabled such a quantum leap
    in the mobility of people,
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    of goods, of resources, of knowledge,
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    such that we can no longer even think
    of geography as distinct from it.
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    In fact, I view the two forces
    as fusing together
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    into what I call connectography.
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    Connectography represents a quantum leap
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    in the mobility of people,
    resources and ideas,
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    but it is an evolution,
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    an evolution of the world
    from political geography,
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    which is how we legally divide the world,
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    to functional geography,
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    which is how we actually use the world,
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    from nations and borders,
    to infrastructure and supply chains.
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    Our global system is evolving
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    from the vertically integrated
    empires of the 19th century,
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    through the horizontally interdependent
    nations of the 20th century,
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    into a global network civilization
    in the 21st century.
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    Connectivity, not sovereignty,
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    has become the organizing principle
    of the human species.
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    (Applause)
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    We are becoming
    this global network civilization
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    because we are literally building it.
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    All of the world's defense budgets
    and military spending taken together
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    total just under
    two trillion dollars per year.
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    Meanwhile, our global
    infrastructure spending
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    is projected to rise
    to nine trillion dollars per year
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    within the coming decade.
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    And, well, it should.
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    We have been living
    off an infrastructure stock
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    meant for a world population
    of three billion,
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    as our population has crossed
    seven billion to eight billion
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    and eventually nine billion and more.
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    As a rule of thumb, we should spend
    about one trillion dollars
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    on the basic infrastructure needs
    of every billion people in the world.
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    Not surprisingly, Asia is in the lead.
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    In 2015, China announced the creation
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    of the Asian Infrastructure
    Investment Bank,
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    which together with a network
    of other organizations
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    aims to construct a network
    of iron and silk roads,
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    stretching from Shanghai to Lisbon.
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    And as all of this topographical
    engineering unfolds,
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    we will likely spend more
    on infrastructure in the next 40 years,
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    we will build more infrastructure
    in the next 40 years,
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    than we have in the past 4,000 years.
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    Now let's stop and think
    about it for a minute.
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    Spending so much more on building
    the foundations of global society
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    rather than on the tools to destroy it
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    can have profound consequences.
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    Connectivity is how
    we optimize the distribution
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    of people and resources around the world.
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    It is how mankind comes to be more
    than just the sum of its parts.
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    I believe that is what is happening.
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    Connectivity has a twin megatrend
    in the 21st century:
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    planetary urbanization.
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    Cities are the infrastructures
    that most define us.
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    By 2030, more than two thirds
    of the world's population
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    will live in cities.
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    And these are not
    mere little dots on the map,
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    but they are vast archipelagos
    stretching hundreds of kilometers.
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    Here we are in Vancouver,
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    at the head of the Cascadia Corridor
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    that stretches south
    across the US border to Seattle.
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    The technology powerhouse
    of Silicon Valley
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    begins north of San Francisco
    down to San Jose
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    and across the bay to Oakland.
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    The sprawl of Los Angeles
    now passes San Diego
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    across the Mexican border to Tijuana.
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    San Diego and Tijuana
    now share an airport terminal
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    where you can exit into either country.
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    Eventually, a high-speed rail network
    may connect the entire Pacific spine.
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    America's northeastern megalopolis
    begins in Boston through New York
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    and Philadelphia to Washington.
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    It contains more than 50 million people
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    and also has plans
    for a high-speed rail network.
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    But Asia is where we really see
    the megacities coming together.
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    This continuous strip of light
    from Tokyo through Nagoya to Osaka
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    contains more than 80 million people,
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    and most of Japan's economy.
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    It is the world's largest megacity.
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    For now.
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    But in China, megacity clusters
    are coming together
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    with populations
    reaching 100 million people.
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    The Bohai Rim around Beijing,
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    The Yangtze River Delta around Shanghai
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    and the Pearl River Delta,
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    stretching from Hong Kong
    north to Guangzhou.
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    And in the middle,
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    the Chongqing-Chengdu megacity cluster,
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    whose geographic footprint
    is almost the same size
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    as the country of Austria.
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    And any number of these megacity clusters
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    has a GDP approaching
    two trillion dollars --
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    that's almost the same
    as all of India today.
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    So imagine if our global diplomatic
    institutions, such as the G20,
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    were to base their membership
    of economic size
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    rather than national representation.
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    Some Chinese megacities
    may be in and have a seat at the table,
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    while entire countries,
    like Argentina or Indonesia would be out.
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    Moving to India, whose population
    will soon exceed that of China,
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    it too has a number of megacity clusters,
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    such as the Delhi Capital Region
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    and Mumbai.
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    In the Middle East,
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    Greater Tehran is absorbing
    one third of Iran's population.
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    Most of Egypt's 80 million people
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    live in the corridor
    between Cairo and Alexandria.
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    And in the gulf, a necklace
    of city-states is forming,
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    from Bahrain and Qatar,
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    through the United Arab Emirates
    to Muscat in Oman.
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    And then there's Lagos,
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    Africa's largest city
    and Nigeria's commercial hub.
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    It has plans for a rail network
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    that will make it the anchor
    of a vast Atlantic coastal corridor,
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    stretching across Benin, Togo and Ghana,
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    to Abidjan, the capital
    of the Ivory Coast.
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    But these countries are suburbs of Lagos.
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    In a megacity world,
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    countries can be suburbs of cities.
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    By 2030, we will have as many
    as 50 such megacity clusters in the world.
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    So which map tells you more?
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    Our traditional map
    of 200 discrete nations
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    that hang on most of our walls,
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    or this map of the 50 megacity clusters?
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    And yet, even this is incomplete
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    because you cannot understand
    any individual megacity
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    without understanding
    its connections to the others.
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    People move to cities to be connected,
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    and connectivity
    is why these cities thrive.
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    Any number of them,
    such as Sao Paulo or Istanbul or Moscow,
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    has a GDP approaching or exceeding
    one third of one half
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    of their entire national GDP.
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    But equally importantly,
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    you cannot calculate
    any of their individual value
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    without understanding
    the role of the flows of people,
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    of finance, of technology
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    that enable them to thrive.
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    Take the Gauteng province of South Africa,
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    which contains Johannesburg
    and the capital Pretoria.
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    It too represents just over
    a third of South Africa's GDP.
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    But equally importantly,
    it is home to the offices
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    of almost every single
    multinational corporation
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    that invests directly into South Africa
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    and indeed, into the entire
    African continent.
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    Cities want to be part
    of global value chains.
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    They want to be part
    of this global division of labor.
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    That is how cities think.
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    I've never met a mayor who said to me,
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    "I want my city to be cut off."
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    They know that their cities belong as much
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    to the global network civilization
    as to their home countries.
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    Now, for many people,
    urbanization causes great dismay.
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    They think cities are wrecking the planet.
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    But right now,
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    there are more than 200
    intercity learning networks thriving.
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    That is as many as the number
    of intergovernmental organizations
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    that we have.
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    And all of these intercity networks
    are devoted to one purpose,
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    mankind's number one priority
    in the 21st century:
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    sustainable urbanization.
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    Is it working?
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    Let's take climate change.
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    We know that summit after summit
    in New York and Paris
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    is not going to reduce
    greenhouse gas emissions.
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    But what we can see
    is that transferring technology
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    and knowledge and policies between cities
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    is how we've actually begun to reduce
    the carbon intensity of our economies.
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    Cities are learning from each other.
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    How to install zero-emissions buildings,
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    how to deploy electric
    car-sharing systems.
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    In major Chinese cities,
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    they're imposing quotas
    on the number of cars on the streets.
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    In many Western cities,
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    young people don't even
    want to drive anymore.
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    Cities have been part of the problem,
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    now they are part of the solution.
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    Inequality is the other great challenge
    to achieving sustainable urbanization.
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    When I travel through megacities
    from end to end --
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    it takes hours and days --
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    I experience the tragedy
    of extreme disparity
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    within the same geography.
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    And yet, our global stock
    of financial assets
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    has never been larger,
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    approaching 300 trillion dollars.
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    That's almost four times
    the actual GDP of the world.
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    We have taken on such enormous debts
    since the financial crisis,
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    but have we invested them
    in inclusive growth?
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    No, not yet.
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    Only when we build sufficient,
    affordable public housing,
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    when we invest in robust
    transportation networks
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    to allow people to connect to each other
    both physically and digitally,
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    that's when our divided
    cities and societies
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    will come to feel whole again.
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    (Applause)
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    And that is why infrastructure
    has just been included
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    in the United Nations
    Sustainable Development Goals,
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    because it enables all the others.
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    Our political and economic leaders
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    are learning that connectivity
    is not charity,
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    it's opportunity.
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    And that's why our financial community
    needs to understand
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    that connectivity is the most
    important asset class of the 21st century.
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    Now, cities can make the world
    more sustainable,
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    they can make the world more equitable,
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    I also believe that
    connectivity between cities
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    can make the world more peaceful.
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    If we look at regions of the world
    with dense relations across borders,
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    we see more trade, more investment,
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    and more stability.
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    We all know the story
    of Europe after World War II,
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    where industrial integration
    kicked off a process
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    that gave rise to today's
    peaceful European Union.
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    And you can see that Russia, by the way,
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    is the least connected of major powers
    in the international system.
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    And that goes a long way
    towards explaining the tensions today.
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    Countries that have
    less stake in the system
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    also have less to lose in disturbing it.
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    In North America, the lines
    that matter most on the map
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    are not the US-Canada border
    or the US-Mexico border,
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    but the dense network of roads
    and railways and pipelines
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    and electricity grids
    and even water canals
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    that are forming an integrated
    North American union.
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    North America does not need more walls,
    it needs more connections.
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    (Applause)
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    But the real promise of connectivity
    is in the postcolonial world.
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    All of those regions where borders
    have historically been the most arbitrary
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    and where generations of leaders
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    have had hostile relations
    with each other.
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    But now a new group of leaders
    has come into power
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    and is burying the hatchet.
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    Let's take Southeast Asia,
    where high-speed rail networks
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    are planned to connect
    Bangkok to Singapore
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    and trade corridors
    from Vietnam to Myanmar.
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    Now this region of 600 million people
    coordinates its agricultural resources
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    and its industrial output.
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    It is evolving
    into what I call a Pax Asiana,
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    a peace among Southeast Asian nations.
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    A similar phenomenon
    is underway in East Africa,
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    where a half dozen countries
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    are investing in railways
    and multimodal corridors
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    so that landlocked countries
    can get their goods to market.
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    Now these countries
    coordinate their utilities
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    and their investment policies.
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    They, too, are evolving
    into a Pax Africana.
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    One region we know could
    especially use this kind of thinking
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    is the Middle East.
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    As Arab states tragically collapse,
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    what is left behind
    but the ancient cities,
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    such as Cairo, Beirut and Baghdad?
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    In fact, the nearly
    400 million people of the Arab world
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    are almost entirely urbanized.
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    As societies, as cities,
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    they are either water rich or water poor,
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    energy rich or energy poor.
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    And the only way
    to correct these mismatches
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    is not through more wars and more borders,
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    but through more connectivity
    of pipelines and water canals.
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    Sadly, this is not yet
    the map of the Middle East.
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    But it should be,
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    a connected Pax Arabia,
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    internally integrated
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    and productively connected
    to its neighbors: Europe, Asia and Africa.
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    Now, it may not seem like connectivity
    is what we want right now
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    towards the world's most turbulent region.
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    But we know from history
    that more connectivity is the only way
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    to bring about stability in the long run,
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    because we know
    that in region after region,
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    connectivity is the new reality.
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    Cities and countries
    are learning to aggregate
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    into more peaceful and prosperous wholes.
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    But the real test is going to be Asia.
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    Can connectivity overcome
    the patterns of rivalry
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    among the great powers of the Far East?
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    After all, this is where World War III
    is supposed to break out.
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    Since the end of the Cold War,
    a quarter century ago,
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    at least six major wars
    have been predicted for this region.
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    But none have broken out.
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    Take China and Taiwan.
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    In the 1990s, this was everyone's
    leading World War III scenario.
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    But since that time,
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    the trade and investment volumes
    across the straits have become so intense
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    that last November,
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    leaders from both sides
    held a historic summit
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    to discuss eventual
    peaceful reunification.
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    And even the election
    of a nationalist party in Taiwan
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    that's pro-independence earlier this year
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    does not undermine
    this fundamental dynamic.
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    China and Japan have
    an even longer history of rivalry
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    and have been deploying
    their air forces and navies
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    to show their strength in island disputes.
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    But in recent years,
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    Japan has been making
    its largest foreign investments in China.
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    Japanese cars are selling
    in record numbers there.
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    And guess where
    the largest number of foreigners
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    residing in Japan today comes from?
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    You guessed it: China.
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    China and India have fought a major war
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    and have three outstanding
    border disputes,
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    but today India is the second
    largest shareholder
  • 17:44 - 17:46
    in the Asian Infrastructure
    Investment Bank.
  • 17:46 - 17:50
    They're building a trade corridor
    stretching from Northeast India
  • 17:50 - 17:54
    through Myanmar and Bangladesh
    to Southern China.
  • 17:54 - 17:58
    Their trade volume has grown
    from 20 billion dollars a decade ago
  • 17:58 - 18:00
    to 80 billion dollars today.
  • 18:01 - 18:04
    Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan
    have fought three wars
  • 18:04 - 18:06
    and continue to dispute Kashmir,
  • 18:06 - 18:09
    but they're also negotiating
    a most-favored-nation trade agreement
  • 18:09 - 18:11
    and want to complete a pipeline
  • 18:11 - 18:15
    stretching from Iran
    through Pakistan to India.
  • 18:15 - 18:17
    And let's talk about Iran.
  • 18:18 - 18:21
    Wasn't it just two years ago
    that war with Iran seemed inevitable?
  • 18:22 - 18:26
    Then why is every single major power
    rushing to do business there today?
  • 18:29 - 18:30
    Ladies and gentlemen,
  • 18:30 - 18:34
    I cannot guarantee
    that World War III will not break out.
  • 18:35 - 18:38
    But we can definitely see
    why it hasn't happened yet.
  • 18:39 - 18:42
    Even though Asia is home
    to the world's fastest growing militaries,
  • 18:42 - 18:46
    these same countries
    are also investing billions of dollars
  • 18:46 - 18:49
    in each other's infrastructure
    and supply chains.
  • 18:49 - 18:53
    They are more interested
    in each other's functional geography
  • 18:53 - 18:55
    than in their political geography.
  • 18:55 - 19:00
    And that is why their leaders think twice,
    step back from the brink,
  • 19:00 - 19:05
    and decide to focus on economic ties
    over territorial tensions.
  • 19:06 - 19:09
    So often it seems
    like the world is falling apart,
  • 19:10 - 19:12
    but building more connectivity
  • 19:12 - 19:15
    is how we put Humpty Dumpty
    back together again,
  • 19:15 - 19:17
    much better than before.
  • 19:18 - 19:19
    And by wrapping the world
  • 19:19 - 19:23
    in such seamless physical
    and digital connectivity,
  • 19:23 - 19:25
    we evolve towards a world
  • 19:25 - 19:28
    in which people can rise
    above their geographic constraints.
  • 19:29 - 19:32
    We are the cells and vessels
  • 19:32 - 19:35
    pulsing through these global
    connectivity networks.
  • 19:35 - 19:39
    Everyday, hundreds of millions
    of people go online
  • 19:39 - 19:42
    and work with people they've never met.
  • 19:42 - 19:45
    More than one billion people
    cross borders every year,
  • 19:45 - 19:49
    and that's expected to rise
    to three billion in the coming decade.
  • 19:50 - 19:53
    We don't just build connectivity,
  • 19:53 - 19:54
    we embody it.
  • 19:55 - 19:58
    We are the global network civilization,
  • 19:58 - 20:00
    and this is our map.
  • 20:01 - 20:06
    A map of the world in which
    geography is no longer destiny.
  • 20:07 - 20:11
    Instead, the future
    has a new and more hopeful motto:
  • 20:11 - 20:13
    connectivity is destiny.
  • 20:14 - 20:15
    Thank you.
  • 20:15 - 20:19
    (Applause)
Title:
How megacities are changing the map of the world
Speaker:
Parag Khanna
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
20:34

English subtitles

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