Skip common site navigation and headers
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Puget Sound Georgia Basin Ecosystem
Begin Hierarchical Links EPA Home > Region 10 > Puget Sound Georgia Basin Ecosystem > Indicators > Population Health > What is happening? End Hierarchical Links

 

What is happening?

Regional Sustainability: Challenge and Opportunity

In 1976, the Puget Sound Georgia Basin was home to 4.1 million people. 25 years later the region has grown significantly to 7 million and by 2025 growth is expected to push the population to 9.4 million, with immigration accounting for over half of that growth.1

As indicated by the figure below, growth in many areas within the Puget Sound and Georgia Basin has outpaced the average global growth rate. This difference in population growth rates is expected to continue over the next several decades.

Chart: Anticipated Puget Sound, Georgia Basin and World Population Growth Rates

Chart: Anticipated Puget Sound, Georgia Basin and World Population Growth Rates

Source: Washington State Department of Ecology

Ethnic Diversity

Click on the graph below to view a larger version of "Percentage of Minorities and Aboriginals by Region or County in the Puget Sound Georgia Basin."
Source: BC Stats, State of Washington Office of Financial Management

Graph: Percentage of Minorities and Aboriginals by Region or County in the Puget Sound Georgia BasinThrough immigration, the region is becoming more ethnically diverse with increasing representation of Asian, Latin, and European cultures. The region is also the home to many First Nation communities (on the Canadian side) and Indian tribes (on the U.S. side) with long established cultural, social, religious and resource-based traditions and customs within local areas. And still, the region and its naming conventions are strongly influenced by the region's early western European explorers. The varied nature of these overlapping cultural communities has important implications for the respective customs, hubs of communication and opinion, and political discourse that will eventually establish the path into the future of the basin.

Diversifying Economies Using Growth Easier in Urban Areas

Cities and larger communities in the basin have had some success in using growth to help develop more diverse local economies. But the rural communities in the region are still struggling with the decline that has occurred in traditional industries like forestry and fishing.

Rural Economic Diversity

Rural economies are diversifying, with more home-based offices, and agriculture-related industries such as wineries and farm-based tourism (pumpkin picking, hay rides, festivals, etc.). However, there is an economic divide between the more urban areas, which have a more diverse economy, and the rural areas that have been more dependent on natural resource development.

Differences in Health

People tend to be healthier in the more urban areas of the region and slightly less healthy in the rural areas.

Previous
Introduction

Next
Why is this happening?

 

{ INDICATOR RESOURCE TABLE } Resources and Downloads

{ INDICATOR RESOURCE TABLE }

 

 
Begin Site Footer

EPA Home | Privacy and Security Notice | Contact Us