If you haven't already listen to this presentation on population and the exponential function by the late Albert Bartlett.
It is essential to understanding this question.
It is essential to understanding this question.
World
population to hit 11bn in 2100 – with 70% chance of continuous rise
New
study overturns 20 years of consensus on peak projection of 9bn and
gradual decline
19
September, 2014
The
world’s population is now odds-on to swell ever-higher for the rest
of the century, posing grave challenges for food supplies, healthcare
and social cohesion. A ground-breaking analysis released on Thursday
shows there is a 70% chance that the number of people on the planet
will rise continuously from 7bn today to 11bn in 2100.
The
work overturns 20 years of consensus that global
population,
and the stresses it brings, will peak by 2050 at about 9bn people.
“The previous projections said this problem was going to go away so
it took the focus off the population issue,” said Prof Adrian
Raftery, at the University of Washington, who led the international
research team. “There is now a strong argument that population
should return to the top of the international agenda. Population is
the driver of just about everything else and rapid population growth
can exacerbate all kinds of challenges.” Lack of healthcare,
poverty, pollution and rising unrest and crime are all problems
linked to booming populations, he said.
“Population
policy has been abandoned in recent decades. It is barely mentioned
in discussions on sustainability or development such as the UN-led
sustainable development goals,” said Simon Ross, chief executive of
Population
Matters,
a thinktank supported by naturalist Sir David Attenborough and
scientist James Lovelock. “The significance of the new work is that
it provides greater certainty. Specifically, it is highly likely
that, given current policies, the world population will be between
40-75% larger than today in the lifetime of many of today’s
children and will still be growing at that point,” Ross said.
Many
widely-accepted analyses of global problems, such as the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s assessment of global
warming, assume a population peak by 2050.
Global population trend. Photograph: Guardian
Sub-saharan
Africa is set to be by far the fastest growing region, with
population rocketing from 1bn today to between 3.5bn and 5bn in 2100.
Previously, the fall in fertility rates that began in the 1980s in
many African countries was expected to continue but the most recent
data shows this has not happened. In countries like Nigeria, the
continent’s most populous nation, the decline has stalled
completely with the average woman bearing six children. Nigeria’s
population is expected to soar from 200m today to 900m by 2100.
The
cause of the stalled fertility rate is two-fold, said Raftery: a
failure to meet the need for contraception and a continued preference
for large families. “The unmet need for contraception - at 25% of
women - has not changed in for 20 years,” he said. The preference
for large families is linked to lack
of female education
which limits women’s life choices, said Raftery. In Nigeria, 28% of
girls still do not complete primary education.
Another
key factor included for the first time was new data on the HIV/AIDS
epidemic showing it is not claiming as many lives as once
anticipated. “Twenty years ago the impact on population was
absolutely gigantic,” Raftery said. “Now the accessibility of
antiretroviral drugs is much greater and the epidemic appeared to
have passed its peak and was not quite as bad as was feared.”
The
research, conducted by an international team including UN experts, is
published
in the journal Science
and for the first time uses advanced statistics to place convincing
upper and lower limits on future population growth. Previous
estimates were based on judgments of future trends made by
researchers, a “somewhat vague and subjective” approach, said
Raftery. This predicted the world’s population would range
somewhere between 7bn and 16bn by 2100. “This interval was so huge
to be essentially meaningless and therefore it was ignored,” he
said.
But
the new research narrows the future range to between 9.6bn and 12.3bn
by 2100. This greatly increased certainty – 80% – allowed the
researchers to be confident that global population would not peak any
time during in the 21st century.
Another
population concern is the ageing populations currently seen in Europe
and Japan, which raises questions about how working populations will
support large numbers of elderly people. But the new research shows
the same issue will affect countries whose populations are very young
today. Brazil, for example, currently has 8.6 people of working age
for every person over 65, but that will fall to 1.5 by 2100, well
below the current level in Japan. China and India will face the same
issue as Brazil, said Raftery: “The problem of ageing societies
will be on them, in population terms, before they know it and their
governments should be making plans.”
In
separate work, published
on Monday,
Wolfgang Lutz, director of the Vienna Institute of Demography,
highlighted education as crucial in not only reducing birth rates but
also enabling people to prosper even while populations are growing
fast. In Ghana, for example, women without education have an average
of 5.7 children, while women with secondary education have 3.2 and
women with tertiary education only 1.5. But he said: “It is not
primarily the number of people that’s important in population
policy, it’s what they are capable of, their level of education,
and their health.”
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