Without question we are conducting a massive experiment
in population dynamics and it will be interesting to observe how it all plays
out over the next two generations. After
that, we will have a lot of interesting answers to today’s questions.
I now think that Earth’s population can readily reach
thirty billion and with a number of significant improvements in agricultural
potential we have already discussed, it could go up to one hundred billion,
while sustaining a vibrant wild.
For now we can take seven billion.
2011: The year
we’ll hit 7 billion
BY Lisa Hymas
31 DEC 2010
Sometime in the latter half of this year, the world population will hit
a new milestone: 7 billion people. Already? Didn't we just hit 6 billion? Yep,
a mere dozen years ago -- and that's probably the last time you heard much
about population. It takes a big, round number with lots of zeroes to get MSMattention.
So in 2011, expect to hear the P word a lot more than you did in 2010,
and a lot more than you will in 2012. National Geographic is kicking off the action with a cover story and photo essay.
It's projected to take us slightly longer to get to the next big, round number with lots
of zeroes -- 14 years instead of 12. While the total number of people on the
planet is still growing fast, the nature and speed of that growth has been
changing dramatically. This Economist video
gives you great visual overview of the trends. (Is it just me or does that
graphic look like a packet of birth-control pills?)
Even as we're adding people, we're also dramatically changing the
demographic composition of entire societies, and creating different kinds of
problems along the way -- like the challenge of aging populationsin many developed
countries. Bryan Walsh of Time suggests that immigration could be one
solution:
[H]ere's the planet we could have in 2050: an overpopulated,
overstressed developing world and an aging, economically stagnant developed
world, with inequality even larger than it is today. Is there any way to escape
that fate? While development and education will be incredibly important
(especially for women -- literacy is one of the best ways to reduce fertility),
the answer may end up being immigration. Think about it -- in the future the
developed world will lack young workers, and the developing world will have an
excess of that resource. Immigration could be a way to balance demographics and
economics -- alleviating population pressure in the poorer parts of the world
while jump starting aging developed nations. The U.S. already does this --
immigration will providemost of American population growth. It would
be a radical solution, given the political resistance to increased immigration
in much of the rich world. (If you think it's a hot topic in the U.S. , try Japan , which steadfastly resists assimilating foreigners,
despite the dire threat posed by an aging population.) But it might be the only
way to save our overpopulated planet.
So much juicy stuff to talk about this year.
UPDATE: I had included here a big
graphic about population growth, but a reader pointed
out that at least some of the info in the graphic was incorrect, so I've
removed it. Here instead is a National
Geographicvideo that accompanies the magazine's cover story on population:
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