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Originally Posted by muertecaza
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I don't think we're at "peak Phoenix" yet. For now, the local river/reservoir system (Gila/Salt) is full, and the ongoing negotiations and mitigation efforts, plus a good couple years of rain/snow with the Colorado system, seem to have at least stabilized reservoir levels and brought them back up from the lows of 2022 to the 30-year historical average. So I think population will continue to grow in the 10-year timeframe. Harder to say at 20 years though.
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Assuming nothing changes "peak" phoenix before the population stabilizes and goes into slow growth mode I think is probably around 7 or 8 million with the Tucson being ~2 million. The smaller cities and towns around the state depending on their economic fortunes probably about ~2 million round the whole state out somewhere around 12 million.
The state is very forward-thinking with-it water plans so that isn't really a problem.
However as others have said things change faster than we realize so who knows. There could be another Baby Boom, or a war? or a plague? Or the widespread adoption of fusion energy?
If you told somebody in 1800 how big even "small" cities are now it would bogle their minds. Sow who knows. Maybe in 50 years the US population will be 600 million and Phoenix will have a population of 10 million?!? Maybe places that right now are meaningless backwaters like Yuma or Sacaton blow up and shoot to the top of the list due to some unforeseen recourse discovery?
Making hard predictions too far in advance are guaranteed to fail because life changes very quickly despite our biases and flawed memories.
Fun exercise, pick any date and go backward or forward 20 or 25 years and imagine explaining the world and all that had happened (or would happen) in those coming decades to somebody. You can do this for any date.
They would think you were completely insane.