HomeWorldWhat’s wrong with the world map? It shrinks Africa, and India has a stake too | Explained

What’s wrong with the world map? It shrinks Africa, and India has a stake too | Explained

Given its distortions, why has the Mercator projection continued to dominate classrooms, atlases and even digital maps for centuries?

August 26, 2025 / 15:19 IST
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Map of Middle East, including Israel is shown on a globe at a studio in London, Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2024. (Image used for representation purpose)
Map of Middle East, including Israel is shown on a globe at a studio in London, Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2024. (Image used for representation purpose)

In June, Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, speaking from the International Space Station, made a striking observation. Looking down from space, he said India looked "much larger" than it does on standard world maps. His words touched on something people in the Global South have long noticed but often overlooked. On the most widely used maps, countries in tropical regions like India and Africa appear shrunken, while places such as Europe, North America and Greenland are blown out of proportion.

Now, this very distortion has become the focus of a new campaign in Africa. The African Union (AU) has officially endorsed the "Correct the Map" movement, which challenges the default use of the Mercator projection. The AU says the world must move toward maps that represent landmasses more fairly.

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"It might seem to be just a map, but in reality, it is not," AU Commission Deputy Chairperson Selma Malika Haddadi told Reuters. She stressed that the way Africa has been represented for centuries on maps has influenced perceptions across education, policy, and media.

That concern is not limited to Africa. For India, too, the debate is deeply relevant.