McKenzie County, North Dakota.
The oil boom over the past decade, which made America the world’s top crude oil producer, made a small rural county in [western] North Dakota the fastest-growing county in population between 2010 and 2020, U.S. Census Bureau data showed.
North Dakota’s McKenzie County was the fastest-growing county in America in the past decade, according to the decennial U.S. census.
The Bakken boom, which began early in the 2010s, contributed a lot to the fastest-growing county in America. [2000 in Montana, 2007 in North Dakota.]
The number of residents in McKenzie County more than doubled over the past decade, jumping from 6,360 residents in 2010 to 14,704 residents 2020, according to the U.S. census.
The growth was “whopping,” Census Bureau demographer Marc Perry said during a press conference, as quoted by the AP.
Williams County, also in North Dakota, registered an 83-percent surge in the number of its residents over the past decade, to 40,950 people in 2020.
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