Title: Population and Sustainable Development: The Complex Reality
1Population and Sustainable Development The
Complex Reality
- Udoy Saikia
- School of Geography, Population and Environmental
Management - Presentation at Professional Development Training
- Flinders University, South Australia
- 24th March 2009
2The themes
- Population growth Global, Developed and
Developing Countries - Population and Environment sustainable
development approach - The North-South debate
3World Population 2009 Source The United Nations
2009
4Trends in population growth past, present,
future
- Pre-Modern (Before 1750)
- Agricultural Revolution 5 - 10 mill
- (About 10,000 Years Ago)
- 1st Century A.D. 270 330 mill
- 1,000 A.D. 275 345 mill
5The first modern expansion
- The first modern expansion started in 1750
-
- Caused mainly by expansions in European
populations with fluctuating birth and death
rates. -
- Estimate of the Worlds population in 1750
between 735 and 805 million
6Time taken to add a billion(Source Population
Reference Bureau 2004)
7Population growth in the 20th Century (between
1900 and 2000)
- World 1.65 to 6.1 billion
- (1.3 per annum)
- Developed countries 0.54 to 1.2 billion
- (0.8 per annum)
- Developing countries 1.1 to 4.9 billion
- (1.5 per annum
8During the 100 years from 1900 to 2000
- 85 of the world population growth occurred in
the developing countries - In 1900, developing countries comprised 67 of
the worlds population - In 2000, developing countries comprised 81 of
the worlds population
9Annual Increase in World Population(Source
Population Reference Bureau 2004)
Millions
Source United Nations, World Population
Prospects The 2002 Revision, 2003.
10Trends in Population Growth Worldwide (Source
Population Reference Bureau 2004)
Population Increase and Growth Rate, Five-Year
Periods
Percent increase per year
Millions
Source United Nations, World Population
Prospects The 2002 Revision (medium scenario),
2003.
11Trends in Population Growth Worldwide
- The last figure illustrates the lag between
changes in the rate of growth and the net
increase in population per year. - During 1985-1995, the population growth rate
declined (due to declining fertility), yet
millions of people were added to the worlds
population - The net addition peaked around 1985, when 87
million people were added each year
12Birth and Death Rates, Worldwide
Rates of birth, death, and natural increase per
1,000 population
Source United Nations, World Population
Prospects The 2002 Revision (medium scenario),
2003.
13(No Transcript)
14Global population trend
15The Current Scenario Total Fertility Rates
(TFR) in 2005Source The State of World
Population 2005, UNFPA
16The Current Scenario Regional Differentials in
Total Fertility Rates in 2005Source The State
of World Population 2005, UNFPA
17The Current Scenario Some HighlightsTotal
Fertility Rates in 2005Source The State of
World Population 2005, UNFPA
- Each and every developed nation has current TFR
below Replacement Level. - A total of 20 developing countries have current
fertility below replacement level. - Countries in Eastern Europe are facing the
biggest fertility crisis with an average TFR of
1.29 which means that every parents/couple is
replaced by only 1.3 children. - Hong Kong has the lowest fertility rate in the
world 0.95 - China- the most populated country in the world
has a current fertility of 1.72 which is below
replacement level. - Tunisia and Mauritius are the only nations in
Africa to have a current fertility below
replacement level. - East Timor has the highest TFR (7.8) in the world
which is almost eight times higher than TFR of
Hong Kong. (Source Demographic Health Survey,
Timor-Leste 2003)
18Trend Fertility Rates The Global scenario
1950-2005 Source UN Population Division, World
Population Prospects The 2002 Revision (2003)
and The State of World Population 2005, UNFPA.
19Population and Environment
- Assessing Environmental Impact on Population
- Paul Ehrlichs formula
- IPAT
- where,
- I Total environmental impact
- P Population size
- A Affluence
- T Environmental impact of technologies used
for affluence
20A brief critique of the IPAT formula
- Modification suggested by Paul Harrison
- IPAT
- where,
- I total environmental impact
- P population size
- A consumption per person (a measurable and
better indicator of Ehrlichs Affluence) - T environmental impact per unit of
consumption (a measurable indicator and better
indicator of Ehrlichs Technology) - Impact can refer to any of our three main forms
of interaction with the environment - our use of primary resources from minerals to
water and land - our physical occupation of space or
- our output of pollutants
21A brief critique of the IPAT formula
- Criticisms of IPAT equation
- This is a multiplicative model which assumes
independence between population size, affluence
and technology an incorrect assumption - The definition of affluence is not clear- how do
you measure affluence?? Is GNP per capita a
reliable indicator to measure affluence??
22A brief critique of the IPAT formula
- Suggested modification of IPAT by CSIRO
- I f (P, L, O, T)
- where,
- P population size
- L life style
- O organisation
- T technology
- f is a function which is not necessarily linear
23Assessing Environmental Impact on Population
- Ecological Footprint
- A nations ecological footprint corresponds the
land area needed to sustain human consumption and
absorb its ensuing wastes. Comparing the
footprint of a given population in a discrete
area with the amount of biologically productive
space available to the population provides a way
to estimate whether or not a populations
consumption is sustainable. (Venetoulis and
Talberth 2005).
24Assessing Environmental Impact on Population
- When a populations footprint is smaller than
the available bio-capacity it is sustainable and
when it is larger, that population is said to be
engaging in unsustainable ecological balance or
negative ecological balance.
25Assessing Environmental Impact on Population
Source Living Planet Report, 2000
- OECD countries have ecological deficit
(consumption of 7.22 area unit against the
capacity of 3.42 area unit) a deficit of 3.80
per person - Latin America and the Caribbean have the worlds
highest ecological surplus 3.93 area units - North America has the worlds highest ecological
deficit (5.64)and the US has the deficit of 6.66
area unit per person. - Africa has a ecological surplus of 0.40
- Most Asian countries have ecological deficit but
the deficit is much lower compared to the
developed countries
26Moving towards Sustainable Development
- Sustainable Development is development that
meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of the future
generations to meet their own needs (WCED, 1987,
p.43) - Treat the Earth well. It is not inherited from
your parents, it is borrowed from your children - Old Kenyan proverb
27The Meaning of SD
28The gap is widening
- The developing world now spends 13 on debt
repayment for every 1 in receives in grants
(Global Development Finance 1999, The World Bank,
cited in http//www.jubileeresearch.org/jubilee200
0/news/imf0904.html) - Half the world nearly three billion people
live on less than two dollars a day. - The GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of the poorest
48 nations (i.e. a quarter of the worlds
countries) is less than the wealth of the worlds
three richest people combined. - A mere 12 percent of the worlds population uses
85 percent of its water, and these 12 percent do
not live in the Third World. - 1.1 billion people in developing countries have
inadequate access to water, and 2.6 billion lack
basic sanitation.
29Global priority North vs. SouthSource
http//www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Facts.asp
30The North-South Gap
31 Would it be better to born a Japanese cow than
an African citizen Source Labonte 2005
32Development assistance as of Gross National
Income
Source OECD/DAC Annual Report 2004
Anglo-American
33Net ODA in 2007 as percent of GNI Source OECD
Development Statistics Online, 2008
34Greenhouse Gassing The Dirtiest Dozen 2005
(Source Labonte 2005)
Italics indicate Kyoto ratifiers
35Is another world possible?
http//www.worldwire.org
36- Data sources
- Ron Labontes seminar at Flinders
http//som.flinders.edu.au/FUSA/SACHRU/Conferences
/events_2005.htm - The United Nations, 2009. World Population
Prospect, The 2008 Revision - Living Planet Report assets.panda.org/downloads/lp
r2000.pdf