Maria remembers when her grandmother’s house in North Jakarta sat comfortably above the neighborhood canal. Today, that same house floods during regular high tides, and the old woman has to keep sandbags by her front door year-round. What Maria doesn’t realize is that her family’s story isn’t unique – it’s playing out in dozens of major cities worldwide.
The house hasn’t moved. The sea hasn’t dramatically risen. Instead, the entire neighborhood has been quietly sinking into the earth, millimeter by millimeter, for decades.
This is the reality facing millions of people in sinking cities around the world, where the ground beneath entire metropolitan areas is literally disappearing beneath their feet.
When Solid Ground Becomes Quicksand
Imagine living in a city where the streets you walked as a child are now several feet lower than they used to be. This isn’t science fiction – it’s happening right now in major urban centers across the globe.
Recent research published in Nature Sustainability analyzed 48 major coastal cities experiencing significant land subsidence. Together, these sinking cities house about one-fifth of the world’s urban population – roughly 635 million people who are unknowingly living in a slow-motion disaster.
The process works like this: as cities grow, they pump massive amounts of groundwater, extract oil and gas, and construct heavy buildings on soft soil. All of this causes the land to compress and sink. Meanwhile, climate change pushes sea levels higher.
“We’re seeing a perfect storm where cities are dropping while oceans are rising,” explains Dr. Sarah Chen, a coastal geologist who has studied subsidence for over a decade. “In some places, the land is sinking three times faster than sea levels are rising.”
What makes this particularly alarming is the speed. While natural land subsidence typically occurs over geological timescales, human activities have accelerated the process dramatically. Some areas are dropping by several centimeters each year – fast enough that you could measure the change with a ruler over just a few years.
The Cities Racing Toward the Ocean Floor
The data reveals some startling numbers. Here are the cities sinking fastest, based on satellite measurements:
| City | Annual Subsidence Rate | Population at Risk | Primary Causes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jakarta, Indonesia | Up to 26mm per year | 10.5 million | Groundwater pumping, soft sediment |
| Ahmedabad, India | Up to 23mm per year | 8.4 million | Industrial water use, clay soils |
| Istanbul, Turkey | Up to 19mm per year | 15.5 million | Construction, groundwater depletion |
| Houston, Texas | Up to 17mm per year | 7.1 million | Oil/gas extraction, water pumping |
| Lagos, Nigeria | Up to 17mm per year | 15.4 million | Coastal sediments, water extraction |
| Manila, Philippines | Up to 17mm per year | 13.9 million | Groundwater use, soft foundation |
These numbers might seem small, but they’re devastating when you do the math. Twenty millimeters per year means eight inches every decade. Over a 30-year period, that’s two feet of elevation lost.
Other major sinking cities include:
- New Orleans – already below sea level in many areas
- Venice – famous for its acqua alta flooding
- Bangkok – experiencing severe subsidence across multiple districts
- Mexico City – built on a drained lake bed
- Tehran – rapid groundwater depletion
- Shanghai – heavy skyscrapers on soft delta soil
“The scary thing is how fast this is accelerating,” notes urban planner Dr. Michael Rodriguez. “Cities that were stable just 20 years ago are now dropping at alarming rates.”
When Cities Can’t Fight Back Anymore
Jakarta tells the most dramatic story of what happens when a city can’t stop sinking. Parts of the Indonesian capital have dropped more than 13 feet since the 1970s. The government has tried everything – building sea walls, restricting groundwater pumping, constructing massive drainage systems.
Nothing worked. In 2019, Indonesia announced plans to move the entire capital to a new location in Borneo.
The human cost of sinking cities extends far beyond flooded streets. Families lose their homes to permanent flooding. Businesses relocate or shut down. Infrastructure crumbles as roads crack and buildings tilt. Fresh water becomes contaminated with salt water.
In Houston, some neighborhoods flood during regular rainstorms that never caused problems before. Homeowners face a cruel choice: keep rebuilding or abandon properties that their families have owned for generations.
“My house used to be the highest on the block,” says longtime Houston resident James Parker. “Now I’m at the lowest point. Every heavy rain, I’m the first to flood.”
The economic impact is staggering. Property values plummet in sinking neighborhoods. Insurance companies either refuse coverage or charge astronomical premiums. Cities face billion-dollar infrastructure repair bills just to keep basic services running.
Climate change makes everything worse. As global temperatures rise, sea levels increase and storm surges become more powerful. Sinking cities face a double threat – they’re getting closer to the ocean just as the ocean is getting bigger and more aggressive.
Some experts believe we’re reaching a tipping point where certain coastal megacities may become uninhabitable within decades, not centuries. The combination of subsidence and sea level rise is creating an emergency that traditional flood defenses simply can’t handle.
“We’re not just talking about occasional flooding anymore,” warns climate researcher Dr. Lisa Thompson. “We’re talking about permanent loss of land to the ocean. Some of these cities are fighting a battle they mathematically cannot win.”
The solutions aren’t easy. Stopping groundwater pumping can help, but cities need alternative water sources. Regulating construction helps, but growing populations need housing. Building sea walls works temporarily, but they become obsolete as the land continues dropping.
More cities may follow Jakarta’s lead and consider managed retreat – the planned relocation of people and infrastructure away from sinking areas. It’s expensive and traumatic, but it might be the only realistic long-term solution for the most vulnerable sinking cities.
FAQs
How fast do cities actually sink?
The fastest-sinking cities drop 1-3 inches per year, while most experience 2-10 millimeters annually. This adds up to several feet over decades.
Can sinking cities be saved?
Some can slow or stop subsidence by reducing groundwater pumping and improving drainage, but cities on soft coastal sediments face ongoing challenges that may require relocation of vulnerable areas.
Why don’t people just move away from sinking cities?
Most residents don’t realize their city is sinking until flooding becomes severe. Additionally, people have jobs, family ties, and property investments that make relocation extremely difficult.
Are any major cities successfully fighting subsidence?
Tokyo has largely stopped sinking through strict groundwater regulations, while Venice is building moveable sea barriers. However, success depends heavily on local geology and resources.
How do scientists measure city subsidence?
Researchers use satellite radar technology called InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) to measure ground movement down to millimeter precision over large areas.
Will climate change make city sinking worse?
Yes, rising sea levels and more intense storms will amplify the impact of subsidence, making flooding more frequent and severe in already vulnerable areas.