The average life expectancy in the European Union has risen to over 44 years, and most metropolitan areas have a fairly young population

Brussels: Europe and the Arabs

In 2021, the median age in the EU was 44.1 years, up from 43.9 in 2020. Most EU metropolitan areas have a relatively young population, for example the French region of Mayotte which is at the extreme had the lowest average age (17.7 years old). Followed by Guyan (26.3 years).

There were 8 regions in the European Union with an average age of at least 50 years in 2021: five regions in eastern Germany are Chemnitz, Sachsen-Anhalt, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Brandenburg and Thuringia, plus Liguria and Friuli-Venezia Giulia in Italy, and Principado de Asturias in Spain.

Based on Eurostat forecasts, the highest average lifespans are expected in 2050 in the Spanish regions of Principado de Asturias (59.1 years) and Castilla y León (57.9 years) and the lowest expected for the French regions of Mayotte (21.1 years) and Guyán (30.6 years).
According to figures issued by the European Statistics Office in Brussels on Friday, regions in Belgium have known the European average, which is a little more than 44 years, but the Brussels-Capital region has known a record of more than 36 years, while in Bulgaria it reached 49 years, and the highest numbers were in Germany and more than 52 years, Italy a little less, then Spain third with more than 50 years, while the lowest numbers were in Latvia and Cyprus, as well as Ireland, Slovakia and Poland

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