Matt Klinman
mklinman@haverford.edu
There are about five billion more people on the planet now than when Thomas
Malthus first published his An Essay on the Principle of Population in which
he posited his dismal theory of population growth. His theory, which is
echoed today by many in the environmental science community, is that an
unchecked rise in the human population on Earth will place our species in
an unsustainable state with our natural environment. His fear was if the
human population continued to rise as it had been for the last two thousand
years, we would eventually exhaust all of our natural resources and succumb
to a self-induced state of population decline and misery. With a world population
now at around 6.5 billion, if his prediction is going to come true, it will
do so soon. The solution some experts propose is to attempt to achieve a
state of population equilibrium, or what they call the optimum human population
size. This idea, however, is ripe with controversy and philosophical quandary.
It is the author’s opinion that it is in the human race’s own
self interest to examine our behavior in our environment and actively choose
the path of sustainability. This essay will examine what it would mean for
the human race to attain optimum human population size.
First, we should examine the current world population statistics. At present
the global population is a little over 6.5 billions people. Current trends
suggest that we have passed the level of highest population growth, which
occurred in 1968, and now are experiencing a global decline in population
growth. It is predicted that the world population will plateau at around
9 billion by 2050 (US Census). An important trend to note, however, is that
birthrates are declining more rapidly in developed nations than in undeveloped
nations, which is leading to the population of undeveloped nations representing
a larger percentage of the world’s population.
This trend demonstrates a very interesting facet of human reproductive behavior.
It would seem that it is possible quantify the “advancement”
of the human species by its birthrate. The more technologically advanced
a society is, the more of an emphasis is placed on the individual and less
cultural emphasis is placed on reproduction. To give an example of how this
trend is manifests it self we can look at the effect of infant mortality
rate on birthrate. With the advent and global proliferation of modern medical
technology infant mortality rates are declining worldwide. According to
the World Health Organization, this is the primary reason for the slowing
population growth. While it seems counterintuitive, it makes sense. The
higher the infant mortality rate is in a country, the more cultural emphasis
will be placed on having many children. This is especially true in poverty
stricken nations where more children means more support for struggling families.
Villagers in India, for example, will have six to eight children to that
they can be assured that two or three will survive and stay home to take
care of their parents in their old age (Southwick164).
This infant mortality/population growth trend adds weight to the argument
that an optimum human population size is naturally desired. Indeed, it is
reasoned that the plateau in global population is not due to the lack of
resources but to the education of women. Further evidence of this can be
seen in the population trends in European countries. In these countries,
fertility rates are dropping below 2.1 children per woman, what is considered
necessary for a society to maintain its population. A fertility rate of
1.33 in Italy, for example, will potentially cause the country to decrease
in population by 1/3 by 2050 (BBC). The two trends seen here introduce a
very interesting relationship between technology, culture and population.
Technologies that preserve human life lead to a cultural shifts that end
up self-regulating a population.
So, what is the significance of nine billion being the population we will
plateau at? Is this optimum human population, or is it simply arbitrary
that human technological progress has allowed for population growth to reach
this level before cultural changes began to temper global population?
To understand this question further it helps to look back at the human species
before the most pervasive cultural trait, agriculture, took root. It is
theorized by some that the global population of 4-5 million was the ideal
global population for the hunter gathering Homo sapiens. Evidence for this
is that the global human population did not rise higher than that for about
two million years before the advent of agriculture (Ponting 37). Is there
an equivalent ideal global population for the farming homo sapiens? More
specifically, does this equilibrium population perhaps depend on the energy
source that is used to support the population, i.e. is there a different
optimum population level for the human race has dependant upon fossil fuels
than if it were dependent upon solar energy? Those who believe in the idea
of optimum human population argue yes, and many say that 9 billion greatly
surpasses what would be ideal for humanity.
According to Paul Ehrlich and his camp, the optimum human population size
is between 1.5-2 billion people on the planet. By their research “…the
present population of 5.5 billion (in 1994), with its resource consumption
patterns and technologies, has clearly exceeded the capacity of Earth to
sustain it. This is evident in the continuous depletion and dispersion of
a one-time inheritance of essential, non-substitutable resources that now
maintains the human enterprise (Daily, 1994).” The 1.5-2 Billion number
they have come up with is based on what they consider to be ideal average
energy consumption for the world. They reason that, at present, world energy
use is about 13 terawatts. About 70% of this is used to by about 1/5 of
the world population in rich countries with the remaining 4/5 of the world
population in developing nations only using 30% of the total world energy.
They claim that this total amount of energy use is biophysically unsustainable
and the disparity of energy us between rich and poor societies is ethically
undesirable (Daily et al).
The fundamental argument that Ehrlich et al. make is that 4.5-6 TW is the
ideal amount of energy use for the human species. They conclude that humans
can feasibly attain an average energy use of 3 kW per capita in which case
1.5-2 billion people can live on planet earth in a manner that will be sustainable
for the future (Daily et al.).
The most readily made critique of this logic is that Ehrlich and Co. do
not and cannot know what level of energy use is sustainable. It is entirely
possible that new technologies will make it possible for us to continue
to extract this high level of energy from our environment and we will never
run into a problem. This is the ever-present hope of the tech fix that will
get humanity out of any bind. Economic theory dictates that monetary pressures
will always sniff out a viable alternative. If this is the case than there
simply is nothing for any of us to worry about, everything will work itself
out just fine.
But, and this is a big but, what if it doesn’t? What if scientists
cannot come up with a more sustainable source of energy? What if the global
oil supply becomes so scarce that its prices soar and most of the world
cannot afford it? What if fate has dictated that those who believe in an
optimum human population of 2 billion need to learn to be careful about
what they wish for? These are all the questions of sustainability.
It is hard to blame the proponents of an optimum human population for wanting
to put in place a secure plan for the human race. Indeed, it most certainly
is necessary for us as humans to listen to our collective conscience and
be cautious of the impact we have on our environment. Realistically, however,
it is perhaps most important to encourage the trends that we see already
in place in human reproductive behavior. The better educated and the healthier
a society is, the less pollution they will incur and the lower their birthrate
will be. The point of energy consumption, however, is perhaps the one most
in need of addressing presently. There is no foreseeable downside to the
development of an environmentally friendly, low energy use lifestyle and
much effort should be put towards that, especially among the first world
countries that are using up the vast majority of the Earth’s natural
resources. In conclusion it seems it would be best to focus our collective
efforts to address directly the global problems that we fear overpopulation
causes. Population decline wont bring better health care and education to
those in developing nations, better health care and education will bring
about population decline. Indeed, a world where the general population cares
that much about the welfare of the rest of the world sounds pretty optimum
to me.
Works Cited
Southwick, Charles H., Global Ecology in Human Perspective Ch 15. pp. 159-182
Oxford Univ. Press, 1996.
Dolan, Edwin G., TANSTAAFL: The Economic Strategy for Environmental Crisis
Ch 5. Pp. 55-72 1974.
Ponting, Clive. A Green History of the World: The Environment and the Collapse
of Great Civilizations. St. Martin's Press, New York, 1991
BBC News “The EU’s Baby Blues” 3/27/2006 Http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4768644.stm
Daily, Gretchen C., Anne H. Ehrlich, Paul R. Ehrlich “Optimum Human
Population Size” July 1994
US Census http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idbnew.html
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