Study: For 25 years, Albania's population contraction is projected to reach 300 thousand

Albania is the country with the highest density of residents in the region. PopulationPyramide.net has updated the global map of population density and provided projections on population for years to come. Compared to the region, Albania has the highest density, where about 101 inhabitants are estimated for every square mile. In the region the most density of [...]
Compared to the region, Albania has the highest density, where about 101 inhabitants are estimated for every square mile. In the region, Montenegro has the lowest population density, where 45 inhabitants are estimated for every square mile. The population is mostly concentrated in the Western Valley, where only Tirana has a density of 682 inhabitants/km2 and numbers 862,361 people in 2017.
After the lower Montenegro, there is Bosnia with 74 inhabitants/kilometers per square and Macedonia with 81 square-mile residents. According to map data, Albania's population currently stands at about 2.91 million, while the area is about 28,000 and 750 kilometers. After 25 years of population projections, however, indicate there will be a reduction of the population to 2.6 million or about 300 thousand inhabitants, while population density will be 93 square residents/kilometers.
World's highest density countries
According to the global map published by Populartyramide.net the world's highest density country is India with 408 inhabitants/km2, South Korea with 505 resident/km2, Pakistan with 247banor/km2. China, although it is the country with the highest number of residents, has a density of 145/km2.
After 25 years of projections show that the density of India's population will increase to over 500 per km2, while China will be low at 139. In Europe, countries with the highest density are Benelux countries, where the density of the Netherlands is 410 per square mile per square mile and Belgium 374 residents per km2. Then ranks the United Kingdom, with 268 inhabitants in a mile.
Lands with lower density














