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Population equation: balancing what we need with what we have.


Planet Earth, now home to about 6.5 billion human beings, has thus far disproved the doomsayers. In 1798, Rev. Thomas Robert Malthus predicted that population would outrun out·run  
tr.v. out·ran , out·run, out·run·ning, out·runs
1.
a. To run faster than.

b. To escape from: outrun one's creditors.

2.
 food supply on the assumption that human numbers would increase at a geometric rate while food would be limited to arithmetic increases. Then, in 1968, Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president.  professor Paul R. Ehrlich For the Nobel Prize winning Immunologist, see .
Paul Ralph Ehrlich (born May 29 1932 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is currently the Bing Professor of Population Studies in the department of Biological Sciences at Stanford University. He received his Ph.D.
 issued a similar warning in his book The Population Bomb, in which he predicted that hundreds of millions of people would die of starvation in the 1970s and 1980s.

Both men underestimated humanity's resourcefulness--as well as its scientific and technological acumen--in figuring out how to provide for its growing numbers. Still, there's little doubt that the Earth's human carrying capacity carrying capacity

the number of animal units that a farm or area will carry on a year round basis, including that needed for conservation of winter feed. Usually stated as dry cows or dry sheep equivalents per hectare.
 has a limit. And growth can't continue indefinitely without more of the significant environmental health impacts we are already seeing. In addition to documenting exactly how much growth is occurring, scientists are now interested in trends reflecting where such growth is occurring and the effect of factors such as consumption rates and migration on sustainability of the Earth's resources.

Maximum Capacity

Nobody really knows what the planet's human carrying capacity is. Some, like Cornell University Cornell University, mainly at Ithaca, N.Y.; with land-grant, state, and private support; coeducational; chartered 1865, opened 1868. It was named for Ezra Cornell, who donated $500,000 and a tract of land. With the help of state senator Andrew D.  ecology and agriculture professor David Pimentel, contend that the Earth has already passed that point. Citing high malnutrition rates in the world, Pimentel estimates that the Earth's carrying capacity--providing a quality life for all inhabitants--would appear to be about 2 billion. Other estimates go to both extremes. In a 1995 Cato Institute "Cato" redirects here. For Cato, see Cato.
The Institute's stated mission is "to broaden the parameters of public policy debate to allow consideration of the traditional American principles of limited government, individual liberty, free markets, and peace" by striving "to achieve
 essay titled "The State of Humanity: Steadily Improving," Julian L. Simon, the late University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
  • University of Maryland, College Park, a research-extensive and flagship university; when the term "University of Maryland" is used without any qualification, it generally refers to this school
 economist, wrote, "We have in our hands now--actually in our libraries--the technology to feed, clothe and supply energy to an ever-growing population.... Even if no new knowledge were ever gained ... we would be able to go on increasing our population forever." On the other end of the spectrum, in 1971--three years after writing The Population Bomb--Ehrlich placed the limit at 500 million.

Others suggest that humans are already finding a way to take care of the population problem as evidenced by declining birth rates everywhere in the world. Declining birth rates don't necessarily translate into declining populations, however. The United Nations (UN) Population Division projects that by 2050, global population could reach 9.1 billion.

This greater global population will differ from the current one in several ways. The population growth of the developed world has slowed to a crawl; fertility rates are on the decline and in some countries, such as Italy and Japan, population itself is projected to peak in five years. But poor countries will experience large increases for decades to come. Meanwhile, the UN points out that in 2007, for the first time in history, the global population will cross over from being predominantly rural to mostly urban, and that that trend will continue indefinitely.

"Most of the growth that's going to happen in the next twenty, thirty years is going to be happening in the poor countries--it's going to happen mostly in the cities, and mostly in the slums of the cities," says John Bongaarts, vice president of policy research at the nonprofit Population Council. "Most of the next two or three billion people will end up in the slums of the poorest countries."

Like many demographers, Bongaarts sees the decline in fertility rates, mostly in the industrial world, as the emerging worldwide norm. This means, he says, that at some point the poorer countries will reach the same stabilization point that the developed world has achieved and that global population will one day decline. He projects that peak will be reached at about 9.5 billion people.

Perhaps surprisingly, population's relationship to health and environmental impacts is often ignored or glossed over by policy makers. In part, says Robert Engelman, vice president for research at the policy action group Population Action International, there's a belief that "population will take care of itself." But there's also a reticence ret·i·cence  
n.
1. The state or quality of being reticent; reserve.

2. The state or quality of being reluctant; unwillingness.

3. An instance of being reticent.

Noun 1.
 to talk about population because it gets tied up in politics, including the abortion debate The abortion debate refers to discussion and controversy surrounding the moral and legal status of abortion. The two main groups involved in the abortion debate are the pro-choice movement, which generally supports access to abortion and regards it as morally permissible, and the .

Julie Starr, a population and environment specialist with the National Wildlife Federation, says she was surprised to see that the eight UN Millennium Development Goals “MDG” redirects here. For other uses, see MDG (disambiguation).

The Millennium Development Goals are eight goals that 192 United Nations member states have agreed to try to achieve by the year 2015.
 that were set in 2000 failed to make any mention of population growth and family planning family planning

Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
. These goals summarize all the development goals agreed to at international conferences and summits during the 1990s, with a target achievement date of 2015. "Each of the goals has specific targets, and population is mentioned nowhere--not even in goals that deal with maternal health Maternal health care is a concept that encompasses preconception, prenatal, and postnatal care. Goals of preconception care can include providing health promotion, screening and interventions for women of reproductive age to reduce risk factors that might affect future pregnancies.  and poverty," she says. "Our message is that you can't do anything about environmental sustainability if we don't address population."

"There's been a lack of attention to the fact that population continues to grow in the world at a rate that is certainly unsustainable," Engelman says. "And population is connected to environmental conditions everywhere. There really isn't any environmental area that you can look at and say that it's completely irrelevant to the number of people living in a particular ecosystem or watershed."

Marking the Trends

An international group of scientists who took part in a major new international study, however, apparently wants to see greater attention paid to population in future discussions about environmental sustainability. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) is a research program that focuses on ecosystem changes over the course of decades, and projecting those changes into the future. It was launched in 2001 with support from the United Nations by the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. , launched by UN secretary-general Kofi Annan Kofi Atta Annan (born April 8, 1938) is a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1 1997 to January 1 2007, serving two five-year terms. He was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001.  in 2000 to assess the impact that environmental changes would have on achieving the Millennium Development Goals, involved the work of 1,360 scientific experts who aspired to measure the environmental impact that people are having on the Earth.

One document to emerge from the assessment process is Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Synthesis, released in March 2005, which is one of several periodic reports scheduled for release through the end of 2005. This report examined the "services" that ecosystems provide (for example, fish from the ocean and pollution filtration from wetlands) and concluded that 15 of the 24 services are being degraded or used unsustainably. It suggested that the various environmental declines comprise a roadblock to achieving many of the Millennium Development Goals, including those calling for ensurance of global environmental stability, poverty alleviation, and food security.

The role of population in causing these declines is implicit throughout Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Synthesis and explicit in a section in which it is identified as one of five "indirect drivers" that are altering ecosystems. Walter V. Reid, director of the assessment project, says ecosystem health is affected by two kinds of pressures that humans exert: changes in demand for (and consumption of) an ecosystem's specific services, and changes in emissions that might harm the ecosystem. "Obviously, both change in demand and change in emissions are closely tied to the combination of population change and economic growth," he says.

To Reid, the most troubling development regarding population trends and their environmental impact is the fact that the greatest population growth is now occurring in environmentally fragile areas, like drylands and mountainous regions, where water is scarce and the soil is generally poor. In those areas, he says, "if you have high population growth that is overtaxing the capacity of the soils to provide food, you have high rates of soil erosion and depletion, and there's just no buffer. And if you need more water, there's just no buffer of water even to begin with."

Demographers and social scientists use the term "poverty trap poverty trap
Noun

the situation of being unable to raise one's living standard because any extra income would result in state benefits being reduced or withdrawn

Noun 1.
" to describe such areas, which are characterized by classic vicious cycles. "The pressure to degrade TO DEGRADE, DEGRADING. To, sink or lower a person in the estimation of the public.
     2. As a man's character is of great importance to him, and it is his interest to retain the good opinion of all mankind, when he is a witness, he cannot be compelled to disclose
 resources is insurmountable," Reid says. "People don't have other options. And when they degrade resources, that leads in the long run to higher levels of poverty and infant mortality (hardware) infant mortality - It is common lore among hackers (and in the electronics industry at large) that the chances of sudden hardware failure drop off exponentially with a machine's time since first use (that is, until the relatively distant time at which enough mechanical  and lower income, which leads to greater pressure to degrade resources."

Another population trend emphasized in the March report is the movement of people to coastal areas around the world. Coastal ecosystems--marshes, mangroves, reefs--are extremely important contributors to human well-being, serving as breeding and nursery grounds for many species and as erosion prevention buffers between land and sea. Yet these benefactors are rapidly being destroyed. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Reid, 35% of the world's mangroves and 20% of its coral reefs coral reefs, limestone formations produced by living organisms, found in shallow, tropical marine waters. In most reefs, the predominant organisms are stony corals, colonial cnidarians that secrete an exoskeleton of calcium carbonate (limestone).  have disappeared in the last two to three decades due to human pressure.

The assessment makes a variety of recommendations for policy makers--remove environmentally harmful subsidies to agriculture and fisheries fisheries. From earliest times and in practically all countries, fisheries have been of industrial and commercial importance. In the large N Atlantic fishing grounds off Newfoundland and Labrador, for example, European and North American fishing fleets have long , improve management of ecosystem services Humankind benefits from a multitude of resources and processes that are supplied by natural ecosystems. Collectively, these benefits are known as ecosystem services and include products like clean drinking water and processes like the decomposition of wastes.  in regional planning regional planning: see city planning.  decisions, provide public education about the importance of ecosystems, promote greener technologies, and more. But Reid believes that if the report is to have an impact, there must be some kind of repeating assessment process. He thinks that a mechanism should be created so that the subject is revisited in similar fashion every 10 years.

The Role of Consumption

Roger-Mark De Souza De Souza or D'Souza is a common Portuguese family name. Although it is still quite common outside Portugal -- especially in Brazil and India --, Souza is the old spelling of present-day Sousa. , technical director of the Population, Health, and Environment program at the Population Reference Bureau The Population Reference Bureau is a non-governmental organization in the United States, founded in 1929 by Guy Irving Burch, with support of Raymond Pearl. It provides information about demography. , points out that another important trend in the developing world is its high and growing proportion of young people. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, the proportion of people under 15 to people over 65 is 44% to 3%, according to the bureau. In Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , the numbers are 32% younger people compared to 6% older people. "That means that we will have continued population growth for some period of time because those young people of today are tomorrow's parents," he says. "We call that 'population momentum.'"

In addition to their raw numbers, De Souza says, ever-increasing globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 means the growing ranks of young people in the developing world may be driven to consume more than their parents do. "They access images about life in other parts of the world on television and the Internet, and they desire to live that way," he explains.

Geographer Robert Kates Robert W. Kates (born 1929) is an American geographer and independent scholar in Trenton, Maine, and University Professor (Emeritus) at Brown University.

Kates was born in New York City.
, a visiting scholar A visiting scholar, in the world of academia, is a scholar from an institution who visits a receiving university that hosts him where he or she is projected to teach (visiting professor), lecture (visiting lecturer), or perform research (visiting researcher  at the Harvard Center for International Development, contends that consumption rates are actually more important than population. Currently, a huge per-capita consumption disparity exists between rich and poor nations. According to the September 2003 Population Bulletin, published by the Population Reference Bureau, in 1999 the average North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 consumed more than 15 times the energy of the average African (230 gigajoules--equivalent to about 143 barrels of oil--in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere.  compared with 15 gigajoules in Africa). "Most people accept the notion that major, long-term environmental problems will stem more from consumption than from population growth," Kates says. "Population growth is one of the forces that drives consumption. But there are a whole host of other forces as well--growing income, changing diets, the creation of transnational markets."

Kates argues that potential growth rates Growth Rates

The compounded annualized rate of growth of a company's revenues, earnings, dividends, or other figures.

Notes:
Remember, historically high growth rates don't always mean a high rate of growth looking into the future.
 for consumption around the world are much greater than the better-known predicted rates for population growth. Therefore, he suggests, the number of people isn't as important as what those people do. "The increase in the number of people is clearly slowing down everywhere in the world," he says. "But the increase in consumption by those people is going up everywhere, except in Africa, and there's no sign of diminution Taking away; reduction; lessening; incompleteness.

The term diminution is used in law to signify that a record submitted by an inferior court to a superior court for review is not complete or not fully certified.
 in the future. So there will be a shift from long-term historic concern about population to a growing concern about how, what, and where we consume."

Others, however, say while paying attention Noun 1. paying attention - paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends without heed to the consequences"
attentiveness, heed, regard
 to consumption is indeed a critical force, its importance should not sideline the question of where and at what level population growth will end. "If our [global] population had stabilized where it was in antiquity, at about two hundred fifty to three hundred million, our consumption probably wouldn't make too much difference," says Engelman. "But it's precisely because human population has gone where it is that consumption has the global impacts that it has. How much 'environmental space' each of us has to consume sustainably has everything to do with how many of us there are."

The Impact of Population

Whether one chooses to attribute impacts to human numbers or human behavior, the fact remains that the world's population--its numbers, its movement, its actions--is having a profound impact on human and environmental health. A variety of organizations and individuals, including the UN and other international agencies, nongovernmental organizations Transnational organizations of private citizens that maintain a consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. Nongovernmental organizations may be professional associations, foundations, multinational businesses, or simply groups with a common interest in , scientists, and demographers, have identified many of the ways in which this is happening.

Water availability. Engelman points out that the amount of fresh water on Earth is roughly the same today as it was 3,000 years ago, while population has increased 40-fold. Declining water tables are a growing problem in much of the world. According to the Population Reference Bureau, 12 of the world's 15 water-scarce countries are in the Middle East and North Africa, comprising an area that experienced more than a doubling of population--from 173 million to 386 million people--between 1970 and 2001. Growing additional food to nourish nour·ish
v.
To provide with food or other substances necessary for sustaining life and growth.
 growing populations will rely heavily on irrigation irrigation, in agriculture, artificial watering of the land. Although used chiefly in regions with annual rainfall of less than 20 in. (51 cm), it is also used in wetter areas to grow certain crops, e.g., rice. , placing greater strain on water tables. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment reports that usage levels of fresh water for drinking, industry, and irrigation are "unsustainable." The American Association for the Advancement of Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), private organization devoted to furthering the work of scientists and improving the effectiveness of science in the promotion of human welfare.  (AAAS AAAS American Association for the Advancement of Science. ), in its 2000 AAAS Atlas of Population and Environment, predicted that the situation is "likely to be worsened by the deteriorating quality of water, polluted pol·lute  
tr.v. pol·lut·ed, pol·lut·ing, pol·lutes
1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter. See Synonyms at contaminate.

2.
 by industrial wastes and sewer discharges."

Deforestation deforestation

Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use.
. According to the Population Reference Bureau, human activities during the 1990s resulted in the deforestation of 563,709 square miles of land, roughly the equivalent of Colombia and Ecuador combined. Most of the deforestation occurred in Africa and South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , where forests have been cleared for cropland crop·land  
n.
Land that is fit or used for growing crops.
, fuel use, and commercial sale of wood products. The environmental and human health impacts of deforestation are varied, including increased propensity for flooding, loss of medicinal species and fuel wood, soil erosion, and exacerbation of climate change as carbon is released back into the atmosphere. Related to deforestation is the issue of biodiversity biodiversity: see biological diversity.
biodiversity

Quantity of plant and animal species found in a given environment. Sometimes habitat diversity (the variety of places where organisms live) and genetic diversity (the variety of traits expressed
 loss. The World Conservation Union estimates that nearly one-fourth of the mammals and one-eighth of the birds on Earth are now threatened with extinction.

Fisheries. "The fishery story is a sad case of overuse overuse Health care The common use of a particular intervention even when the benefits of the intervention don't justify the potential harm or cost–eg, prescribing antibiotics for a probable viral URI. Cf Misuse, Underuse.  by humans," says Bongaarts. "Fish populations have collapsed in many parts of many oceans, and lower-quality fish are replacing them." According to the AAAS atlas, the world's marine catch increased fivefold fivefold
Adjective

1. having five times as many or as much

2. composed of five parts

Adverb

by five times as many or as much

Adj. 1.
 between 1950 and 1990, but has remained stagnant ever since. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment took an even bleaker view, finding that harvests have been declining since the late 1980s (Reid says the discrepancy relates to how one interprets the official statistics reported by different countries).

Climate change. The link between population growth and climate change is less clear. Engelman points out that the vast majority of climate

change is driven by emissions from industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 countries, the populations of which will soon peak or have already done so. But poor countries are rapidly expanding their industrial capacity in response to outsourcing by industrialized countries, and their share of climate change-related emissions will increase rapidly in coming years, raising the need for international agreements on emissions reductions, Engelman says.

Air quality. The World Health Organization (WHO), in its 1999 Air Quality Guidelines, said that outdoor air pollution in Western Europe Western Europe

The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO).
 and North America has improved since 1970, but in less developed countries air pollution in the large cities--including Delhi, Jakarta, Mexico City Mexico City
 Spanish Ciudad de México

City (pop., 2000: city, 8,605,239; 2003 metro. area est., 18,660,000), capital of Mexico. Located at an elevation of 7,350 ft (2,240 m), it is officially coterminous with the Federal District, which occupies 571 sq mi
, and many Chinese cities--is severe. So is its impact on public health. The World Resources Institute Founded in 1982, the World Resources Institute (WRI) is an environmental think tank based in Washington, D.C. WRI is an independent, non-partisan and nonprofit organization with a staff of more than 100 scientists, economists, policy experts, business analysts, statistical  studied the health effects of air pollution in cities in poor nations and said in the 1999 report Urban Air Pollution Risks to Children: A Global Environmental Health Indicator that it was responsible for 50 million cases per year of chronic cough chronic cough,
n health condition characterized by either a lingering cough or a recurring cough lasting more than a month.
 among children under age 14.

Infectious disease Infectious disease

A pathological condition spread among biological species. Infectious diseases, although varied in their effects, are always associated with viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, multicellular parasites and aberrant proteins known as prions.
. Human population growth and migration has also fostered the emergence of many infectious diseases infectious diseases: see communicable diseases.  by increasing population density. This is especially true in urban areas, where illnesses such as dengue dengue
 or breakbone fever or dandy fever

Infectious, disabling mosquito-borne fever. Other symptoms include extreme joint pain and stiffness, intense pain behind the eyes, a return of fever after brief pause, and a characteristic rash.
 and cholera are becoming more common, the Population Reference Bureau reported in the September 2003 Population Bulletin. Encroachment An illegal intrusion in a highway or navigable river, with or without obstruction. An encroachment upon a street or highway is a fixture, such as a wall or fence, which illegally intrudes into or invades the highway or encloses a portion of it, diminishing its width or area, but  into wildlife habitats also exposes humans to new diseases. "Increased contact with wildlife and associated diseases, combined with international trade in livestock, has led to outbreaks of diseases such as rinderpest rinderpest or cattle plague, an acute and highly infectious viral disease of cattle, primarily in N Africa, SE Asia, and India. It less frequently affects other ruminants, such as sheep, goats, and wild game.  [a viral disease affecting ungulates ungulates, ungulata

animals with hooves; cattle, sheep, goat, pig, horse and many wild and other domesticated species.
] in Africa and foot-and-mouth disease foot-and-mouth disease, highly contagious disease almost exclusive to cattle, sheep, swine, goats, and other cloven-hoofed animals. It is caused by a virus that was identified in 1897.  in Europe," stated the report.

The U.S. Situation

The Center for Environment and Population (CEP CEP congenital erythropoietic porphyria.

CEP
abbr.
congenital erythropoietic porphyria
), a nonprofit research and public policy organization, will be releasing a national report this fall that will explore the relationship between U.S. population trends and their impact on health and the environment. Victoria Markham, director of the CEP and executive editor of the AAAS Atlas of Population and Environment, says one of the reasons for the study is that the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , in a departure from other industrialized nations, is experiencing significant population growth and will continue to do so.

Where the AAAS atlas was one of the first large efforts to tie known data about environmental change to population, the upcoming CEP report will do the same sorts of comparisons within American borders. Markham says the latter report will focus on several human population variables that relate to environmental impact--population growth, distribution, movement, and makeup, as well as household demographic trends and consumption rates--and apply them to the nation's four census regions.

With a population of 298 million, the United States is the third most populous country in the world, behind China (population 1.3 billion) and India (population 1.1 billion). Projections in the Population Reference Bureau's 2004 World Population Data Sheet call for the United States to remain third behind China and India for decades to come, while two other current industrialized countries, Russia and Japan, will be dropping out of the top 10 and leaving the United States as the only currently industrialized country on that list by 2050.

"Couple our growing population with our disproportionately high rate of resource consumption, and you have a volatile combination," Markham says. "The United States turns out to be a world leader in terms of per-capita global environmental impact."

Like the rest of the world, the United States is becoming ever more urbanized, but at a more advanced level, as 80% of Americans now live in metropolitan areas, according to the 2001 U.S. Census Bureau Noun 1. Census Bureau - the bureau of the Commerce Department responsible for taking the census; provides demographic information and analyses about the population of the United States
Bureau of the Census
 report Population Change and Distribution, 1990 to 2000. But while more Americans than ever are living in metro areas, most of the growth is occurring outside center cities, in outlying suburban areas.

Markham says this outcome--sprawl--can be illustrated by the fact that while the American population has grown by 17% in the last two decades, the land area converted to metropolitan use grew by 50%. "Air pollution is very closely tied to population," she says. "Transportation is the fastest growing energy-use sector in the United States, and it's particularly tied to this sprawled development because people have to drive more and drive farther. The result is increased carbon dioxide carbon dioxide, chemical compound, CO2, a colorless, odorless, tasteless gas that is about one and one-half times as dense as air under ordinary conditions of temperature and pressure.  emissions."

Another trend is a continuing higher rate of population increase in the South and West, compared with the Midwest and Northeast. This trend largely reflects the movement of the industrial infrastructure from the North to the South and West starting in the 1960s for various economic reasons, such as lower taxes and lower labor costs. In terms of environmental impact, the population growth in the West is especially worthy of concern because of the region's fragile water supply. "Population growth couldn't be happening in a more environmentally vulnerable place in the United States," Markham says. The Ogallala aquifer The Ogallala Aquifer, also known as the High Plains Aquifer, is a vast yet shallow underground water table aquifer located beneath the Great Plains in the United States. , which lies under eight western states and is the largest groundwater system in North America, accounting for 20% of all irrigated land in the United States, is down one-third of its capacity and is shrinking at the rate of a foot per year, according to Markham.

Meanwhile, Americans are living in ever larger per-capita household space, which exacerbates energy consumption. The CEP report will describe the continuing decline in number of persons per household, which translates into more households. At the same time, the physical size of American homes is growing ever larger. According to Markham, the proportion of houses of at least 3,000 square feet more than doubled between 1988 and 2003; during that same time, the number of new houses smaller than 1,200 square feet declined. And lot sizes of new one-family houses outside the country's metropolitan areas rose by 6% in the past 10 years, according to the Census Bureau. The increase in the number of houses overall combined with larger lot sizes means more land is being used for residential development than ever before.

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]

Reasons for Hope, Possible Futures

Discussions about burgeoning human populations and their impact on health and the environment abound in gloomy data and prospects of doom. But experts also suggest there are reasons to be somewhat optimistic op·ti·mist  
n.
1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome.

2. A believer in philosophical optimism.



op
. First, they say, humanity has proven itself to be more resourceful than Malthus and Ehrlich gave it credit for being. "Basically, forty or fifty years ago, the whole world was growing rapidly," Bongaarts says. "There was a huge concern about potential food shortages and environmental problems. But birth rates have declined, so growth is not as rapid as people thought it would be."

Even though the rates are declining in poor countries, they're still higher than the acknowledged replacement figure of 2.1 children per woman. Still, Asian, Latin American, and Caribbean women are bearing children at a rate of 2.6 children per woman in 2004 compared to about 5 per woman in 1970, according to the UN Population Division. African women still have 5 children on average, but that's down from 6.7 in 1970. Europe has dropped from 2.2 children per woman to a population-slashing 1.4. In the major world regions, only North America has not seen declining birth rates. North American women averaged 2.0 children in 1970 and the figure was the same in 2004.

To many observers, the decline in global birth rates is clear proof of the effectiveness of family planning programs. "I think the greatest proportion of demographic research points to the worldwide effort to make contraception available, which was clearly desired and was in fact picked up and used," Engelman says.

Lars Bromley, a senior program associate in the AAAS Office of International Initiatives, has come to the same conclusion. "If a country works to reduce its birth rate, it's not a foregone conclusion foregone conclusion
n.
1. An end or a result regarded as inevitable: The victory was a foregone conclusion. See Usage Note at foregone.

2.
 that they're destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 to have twelve children per woman," he says. "Places like Bangladesh and elsewhere have really performed miracles over the last generation." According to Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2004, published by the U.S. Agency for International Development, birth rates in that country have declined from 6.3 children per woman in the early 1970s to 3.0 children in 2004.

Another improvement, Kates points out, is that although the total amount of energy consumed continues to rise, the world is reducing its "energy intensity"--that is, the amount of energy it uses per unit of production--at a rate of about 1% per year. This is mostly due to improved energy-saving technology.

But as the scientists who conducted the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment conclude, a broad international response is necessary to deal with the environmental declines caused by increasing human pressure. They didn't make predictions about what may happen, but they did offer four possible future scenarios. The first, "Global Orchestration orchestration

Art of choosing which instruments to use for a given piece of music. The sections of the orchestra historically were separate ensembles: the stringed instruments for indoors, the woodwind instruments for outdoors, the horns for hunting, and trumpets and drums
," depicts a world that makes economic development a priority and emphasizes solving environmental problems rather than preventing them in the first place. The second, "Order from Strength," represents a fragmented world concerned primarily with security and protection, where the approach to the environment again is reactive. The third, "Adapting Mosaic," would deemphasize economic development and put priority on the health of ecosystems, largely through the strengthening of local management strategies. The fourth scenario, "TechnoGarden," describes a future in which a unified world relies on environmentally sound technology and highly managed, often engineered, ecosystems to deliver ecosystem services, and that achieves both strong economic growth and a healthier world.

Reid believes that the work on which direction the world should go must start soon. And he believes the debate must focus more on population than it has to date. "Population is one of those issues that's so central and so politicized," he says. "Sometimes you worry that people are ignoring it because of the political side of it, but it's critical that people keep thinking about it and about steps that can be taken to address population problems."

Signs of Ecological Change

Over the past century and especially over the past 40 years, people have effected vast changes in the global environment. Those people most directly affected by environmental challenges, from water pollution to climate change, are also the poorest and least able to change livelihoods or lifestyles to cope with or combat ecological decline. Some signs of ecological change include:

Deforestation. Farmers, ranchers, loggers, and developers have cleared about half the world's original forest cover, and another 30% is degraded or fragmented.

Climate change. As a result of fossil fuel fossil fuel: see energy, sources of; fuel.
fossil fuel

Any of a class of materials of biologic origin occurring within the Earth's crust that can be used as a source of energy. Fossil fuels include coal, petroleum, and natural gas.
 consumption, carbon dioxide levels today are 18% higher than in 1960 and an estimated 31% higher than at the onset of the Industrial Revolution in 1750. Accumulation of greenhouse gases (including carbon dioxide) in t, he atmosphere is tied to rising and extreme change in temperatures as well as more severe storms.

Food insecurity. Over the past half-century, land degradation The causes of land degradation are mainly anthropogenic and agriculture related. The major causes include:
  • Land clearance and deforestation
  • Agricultural depletion of soil nutrients
  • Urban conversion
  • Irrigation
  • Pollution
 has reduced cropland by an estimated 13% and pasture by 4%. In many countries, population growth has raced ahead of food production in recent years. Some 800 million people are chronically malnourished mal·nour·ished
adj.
Affected by improper nutrition or an insufficient diet.
, and 2 billion lack food security.

Water scarcity. Since the 1950s, global demand for water has tripled. Groundwater quantity and quality are declining due to overpumping, runoff Runoff

The procedure of printing the end-of-day prices for every stock on an exchange onto ticker tape.

Notes:
If the "tape is late" then it can take a long time to print off all the closing prices.
 from fertilizers and pesticides, and leaking of industrial waste. Half a billion people live in countries defined as water-stressed or water-scarce; by 2025, that figure is expected to surge to between 2.4 billion and 3.4 billion.

Overfishing Overfishing occurs when fishing activities reduce fish stocks below an acceptable level. This can occur in any body of water from a pond to the oceans. More precise biological and bioeconomic terms define 'acceptable level'. . Three-quarters of fish stocks are now fished at or beyond sustainable limits. Industrial fleets have fished out at least 90% of large ocean predators--including tuna, marlin, and swordfish--in the last 50 years.

Sea level rise. Sea level has risen an estimated 10-20 centimeters largely as a result of melting ice masses and the expansion of oceans linked to regional and global warming global warming, the gradual increase of the temperature of the earth's lower atmosphere as a result of the increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. . Small island nations and low-lying cities and farming areas face severe flooding or inundation INUNDATION. The overflow of waters by coming out of their bed.
     2. Inundations may arise from three causes; from public necessity, as in defence of a place it may be necessary to dam the current of a stream, which will cause an inundation to the upper lands;
.

Source: UNFPA UNFPA United Nations Population Fund (formerly United Nations Fund for Population Activities)
UNFPA United Nations Fund for Population Activities (now United Nations Population Fund) 
. 2004. State of World Population 2004: The Cairo Consensus at Ten--Population, Reproductive Health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene  and the Global Effort to End Poverty. New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, NY: United Nations Population Fund The United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA) began funding population programs in 1969. It was renamed the United Nations Population Fund in 1987, but kept its original abbreviation. .

Future Scenarios

Global Orchestration

Globally based trade reform lifts populations out of poverty, freeing up resources to respond to environmental problems as they become apparent.

Adapting Mosaic

Political activity targets regional ecosystems, and investments are geared toward better understanding of these systems. Some areas thrive while others continue to degrade.

Order from Strength

Nations are concerned primarily with security. Powerful countries shift burdens to weaker nations, and ecosystem services become increasingly vulnerable.

TechnoGarden

A globally connected world relies on highly managed ecosystems to provide services and solutions to environmental problems. Ecological engineering Ecological Engineering is an emerging field of study integrating ecology and engineering, concerned with the design, monitoring and construction of ecosystems. The design of sustainable ecosystems intent to integrate human society with its natural environment for the benefit of  flourishes.
Countries Accounting for About 75% of the World Population
by Order of Population Size

                              1950

Rank                     Population (a)       Cumulated %

 1. China                      555               22.0
 2. India                      358               36.2
 3. United States              158               42.5
 4. Russia                     103               46.6
 5. Japan                      84                49.9
 6. Indonesia                  80                53.0
 7. Germany                    68                55.7
 8. Brazil                     54                57.9
 9. United Kingdom             50                59.9
10. Italy                      47                61.7
11. France                     42                63.4
12. Bangladesh                 42                65.0
13. Ukraine                    37                66.5
14. Pakistan                   37                68.0
15. Nigeria                    33                69.3
16. Spain                      28                70.4
17. Mexico                     28                71.5
18. Vietnam                    27                72.6
19. Poland                     25                73.6
20. Egypt                      22                74.4

                              2005

Rank                     Population (a)       Cumulated %

 1. China                    1,316               20.4
 2. India                    1,103               37.4
 3. United States              298               42.0
 4. Indonesia                  223               45.5
 5. Brazil                     186               48.4
 6. Pakistan                   158               50.8
 7. Russia                     143               53.0
 8. Bangladesh                 142               55.2
 9. Nigeria                    132               57.3
10. Japan                      128               59.2
11. Mexico                     107               60.9
12. Vietnam                    84                62.2
13. Philippines                83                63.5
14. Germany                    83                64.8
15. Ethiopia                   77                66.0
16. Egypt                      74                67.1
17. Turkey                     73                68.2
18. Iran                       70                69.3
19. Thailand                   64                70.3
20. France                     60                71.2
21. United Kingdom             60                72.2
22. Italy                      58                73.1
23. Dem Rep Congo              58                73.9
24. Myanmar                    51                74.7

                              2050

Rank                     Population (a)       Cumulated %

 1. India                    1,593               17.5
 2. China                    1,392               32.9
 3. United States              395               37.2
 4. Pakistan                   305               40.6
 5. Indonesia                  285               43.7
 6. Nigeria                    258               16.6
 7. Brazil                     253               49.4
 8. Bangladesh                 243               52.0
 9. Dem Rep Congo              177               54.0
10. Ethiopia                   170               55.9
11. Mexico                     139               57.4
12. Philippine,                127               58.8
13. Uganda                     127               60.2
14. Egypt                      126               61.6
15. Vietnam                    117               62.9
16. Japan                      112               64.1
17. Russia                     112               65.3
18. Iran                       102               66.5
19. Turkey                     101               67.6
20. Afghanistan                 97               68.7
21. Kenya                       83               69.6
22. Germany                     79               70.4
23. Thailand                    75               71.3
24. United Kingdom              67               72.0
25. Tanzania                    67               72.7
26. Sudan                       67               73.5
27. Colombia                    66               74.2
28. Iraq                        64               74.9

(a) In millions

Source: UN. 2005. World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision.
Highlights. New York, NY: United Nations; Table VIII.3.

Countries Accounting for About 75% Average Annual Population
Increase in the World

                          1950-1955

                             Pop
Rank                     Increase (a)       Cumulated %

 1. China                  10,849              22.8
 2. India                   7,507              38.6
 3. United States           2,652              44.1
 4. Brazil                  1,782              47.9
 5. Russia                  1,740              51.5
 6. Indonesia               1,382              54.5
 7. Japan                   1,238              57.1
 8. Bangladesh                852              58.8
 9. Pakistan                  837              60.6
10. Mexico                    800              62.3
11. Nigeria                   750              63.9
12. Philippines               645              65.2
13. Thailand                  627              66.5
14. Turkey                    625              67.8
15. Egypt                     572              69.0
16. Ukraine                   560              70.2
17. Vietnam                   537              71.4
18. South Korea               513              72.4
19. Poland                    491              73.5
20. Iran                      435              74.4

WORLD                      47,586             100.0

                          2005-2005

Rank                   Pop Increase (a)     Cumulated %

 1. India                  16,457              21.7
 2. China                   8,373              32.7
 3. Pakistan                3,057              36.8
 4. United States           2,812              40.5
 5. Nigeria                 2,784              44.2
 6. Indonesia               2,721              41.7
 7. Bangladesh              2,581              51.1
 8. Brazil                  2,509              54.5
 9. Ethiopia                1;781              56.8
10. Dem Rep Congo           1,499              58.8
11. Philippines             1,458              60.7
12. Mexico                  1,388              62.5
13. Egypt                   1,349              64.3
14. Afghanistan             1,226              65.9
15.Vietnam                  1,113              67.4
16. Turkey                    992              68.7
17. Uganda                    901              69.9
18. Iraq                      747              70;9
19. Kenya                     713              71.8
20. Tanzania                  713              72.8
21. Colombia                  696              73.7
22. Sudan                     666              74.6

WORLD                       75,835             100.0

                          2045-2050

Rank                   Pop Increase (a)     Cumulated %

 1. India                   4,994              14.8
 2. Dem Rep Congo           2,935              23.5
 3. Uganda                  2,855              32.0
 4. Nigeria                 2,523              39.5
 5. Pakistan                2,498              46.9
 6. Ethiopia                1,999              52.8
 7. Afghanistan             1,699              57.9
 8. Bangladesh              1,493              62.3
 9. United States           1,489              66.7
10. Kenya                   1,058              69.9
11. Niger                   1,007              72.9
12. Yemen                     881              75.5

WORLD                      33,697             100.0

(a) In thousands.

Source: UN. 2005. World Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision.
Highlights. New York, NY: United Nations; Table VIII.6.
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Title Annotation:Environews/ Focus
Author:Dahl, Richard
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Sep 1, 2005
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