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How many is too many?

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How many is too many? Analysis of the population growth: Brain teaser: What happened on the Easter island? What is the pattern of the population growth? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How many is too many?


1
How many is too many?
  • Analysis of the population growth
  • Brain teaser What happened on the Easter island?

2
What is the pattern of the population growth?
  • Watch the video and come up with your conclusions?

3
What is the pattern of the population growth?
  • 1800 is the breaking point 1st billion is
    reached.
  • Why did the population start to dramatically
    increase after 1840?
  • Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions.
  • As countries started to prosper, the population
    grew.
  • What has been the distribution of the population
    growth?
  • Rural vs. Urban
  • North vs. South

4
Current numbers
  • Over 90 occurs in the developing world,
    countries that are least capable to cope with the
    resource and environmental consequences of the
    growth population.
  • 1 billion is added every 11 years.
  • Every day global population grows by 240,000
    people
  • Every year it grows by over 95 million.

5
Other estimates - concerns
  • By 2025 labor force in the developing countries
    will be 3.1 billion. Education and training
    spending will be on the rise.
  • Every year another 38 million jobs will be
    needed, not counting jobs required to wipe out
    existing unemployment of 40.
  • Elderly population will continue to be on the
    rise world wide.

6
What is the message of the cartoon?
7
What are the concerns associated with the rapid
population growth?
  • Thomas Malthus theory
  • Population would increase at a geometric rate
    (the sequence 2, 6, 18, 54, ... is a geometric
    progression with common ratio 3) and the food
    supply at an arithmetic rate (the sequence 3, 5,
    7, 9, 11, 13, is an arithmetic progression with
    common difference 2). So?
  • " The number of labourers also being above the
    proportion of work in the market, the price of
    labor must tend towards a decrease while the
    price of provisions would at the same time tend
    to rise".
  • It will lead to widespread poverty and
    starvation, as food supplies would be quickly
    outstripped by ever increasing population, which
    would only be checked by natural occurrences such
    as disease, high infant mortality, famine. So?

8
What are the concerns associated with the rapid
population growth?
  • Therefore competition for scarce resources would
    intensify the frequency of world conflicts. The
    silver lining of the theory is that these
    Malthusian checks would reduce/slow down the
    population growth.
  • Would this theory be relevant today? Explain.

9
Have we reached the limit? W. Catton
  • Carrying capacity the maximum amount of
    inhabitants both animal and human that the Earth
    can support indefinitely. Shift towards looking
    at consumption rates, rather than just population
    growth rates.
  • "... our lifestyles, mores, institutions,
    patterns of interaction, values, and expectations
    are shaped by a cultural heritage that was formed
    in a time when carrying capacity exceeded the
    human load. A cultural heritage can outlast the
    conditions that produced it. That carrying
    capacity surplus is gone now, eroded both by
    population increase and immense technological
    enlargement of per capita resource appetites and
    environmental impacts. Human life is now being
    lived in an era of deepening carrying capacity
    deficit. All of the familiar aspects of human
    societal life are under compelling pressure to
    change in this new era when the load increasingly
    exceeds the carrying capacities of many local
    regionsand of a finite planet. Social
    disorganization, friction, demoralization, and
    conflict will escalate.

10
What are the consequences of over-reaching the
carrying capacity?
  • Increased ecological foot print - the load people
    impose on nature.
  • Drawing down of resources - stealing of
    non-renewable resources from the future
    generation.
  • Earth can supply 1.89 ha per person. We now
    consume 2.8 ha.
  • Unequal consumption rates - Canada consumes 7.25
    ha vs. 0.6 ha in Bangladesh. If everybody wants
    to consume like Canada, it would take 4 Earths to
    support it.

11
Where have all the trees gone?
12
What is the message?
13
What might prevent the catastrophes of
overpopulation and over consumption?
  • Human ingenuity and innovation.
  • Political rise of the green agenda both
    nationally and globally.
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