The population of Nigeria is pegged at an estimation of 198 million, according to the National Population Commission, NPC.
NPC Chairman, Eze Duruiheoma, stated this in New York, while delivering Nigeria’s statement on sustainable cities, human mobility and international migration at the 51st session of commission on population and development.
Nigeria currently ranks as the seventth most populous nation in the world.
As of 2016, the World Bank said Nigeria had an estimated 186 million people.
Duruiheoma said urban population was growing at an average annual rate of about 6.5 percent, adding that teenagers, women of child-bearing age and the working age population were more engaged in urbanisation.
He said: “Nigeria remains the most populous in Africa, the seventh globally with an estimated population of over 198 million.
“The recent World Population Prospects predicts that by 2050, Nigeria will become the third most populated country in the world.
“Over the last 50 years, Nigeria’s urban population has grown at an average annual growth rate of more than 6.5 percent without commensurate increase in social amenities and infrastructure.
“It grew substantially from 17.3 in 1967 to 49.4 percent in 2017. In addition, the 2014 World Urbanisation Prospects report, predicts that by 2050, most of the population – 70 percent – will be residing in cities.
“The 2010 human mobility Survey report revealed that 23 percent of the sampled population was of more females than males.”
Duruiheoma said an estimated 1.76m internally displaced persons, IDPs, were from the six states in the north-east.
According to him, existing urbanisation trend, coupled with IDPs in cities, pose critical challenges to securing sustainability of the nation’s cities.
He said like in other developing countries, Nigerian cities host widespread poverty, under-employment and unemployment at an average of 18.4 percent, citing the National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, 2017 report.
In an interview last year, Ghaji Bello, Director-General of NPC, said the commission might conduct census in 2018, adding that the proposed census would cost an estimated N272 billion.
“Ordinarily, it ought to have a cycle of its own and that cycle should be five years or 10 years. We should have conducted the last census in 2016 but for a variety of reasons outside the control of the population commission, we were unable to do it,” he had said.
The last census was conducted in 2006.