Title: Overpopulation and Population Control
1Overpopulation and Population Control
- Miller, G. Tyler (2003) Environmental Science
working with the Earth. Ninth edition. (Chapter
11)
2What Does Population Density Tell?
- All too often, overpopulation is thought of
simply as crowding too many people in a given
area, too high a population density. - If brute density were the criterion (of
overpopulation), one would have to conclude that
Africa is underpopulated, because it has only
55 people per square mile, while Europe
(excluding the USSR) has 261 and Japan 857.
3Distribution of Human Population
World
Africa
4Effective Population Density
- If we exclude the desert or impenetrable forest
of Africa, the more inhabitable portion is just
over ½ of Africas area. - Effective density 117 per sq mile (? 1/5 of
effective density in UK!) - Even by 2020, Africas effective density ? that
of France (266 per sq mile), yet few people would
consider France is overpopulated.
5Overpopulation Occurs When
- Overpopulation occurs when
- the long-term carrying capacity of an area is
being degraded by its current human occupants. - (population size of an area relative to the
areas carrying capacity)
6Identifying Overpopulation
- According to World Health Organization (WHO), at
present - 1 billion people living in poverty
- 10 million people die each year from
malnutrition, starvation, and diseases from
drinking contaminated water - Premature deaths 27,400 people per day
- Natural resources under increasing pressure
(depleting) - Main characteristics of overpopulation in
animals - Mass suffering
- A high rate of premature death
- Deterioration of the environment
- Are we overpopulated?
7Ecological Footprints
- Ecological footprint estimates the area of
productive land required to - produce the resources used
- give room for infrastructure
- assimilate the wastes produced (eg carbon dioxide
emitted from burning fossil fuels) - at a specified material standard of living.
- We have different ecological footprints
- ? We have different impacts on the Earth
- A useful tool to measure and monitor
sustainability. -
8Global and Local Ecological Footprints
- 1997 Ecological Footprint of global population
2.85 30 larger than the Earths biological
productive capacity ? rapid depletion of
resources - 1997 Ecological Footprint of HK 7.14 (ranked
13th out of 151 countries and regions) - If HK people continued to consume resources and
emit carbon dioxide at the same rates - ? would need 444 times the existing land area
(or 170 times the total area including marine
waters) to sustain ourselves! - If the whole world consumed resources and emitted
carbon dioxide at rates similar to HK - ? would need another two planets to support us!
- Stealing the Earth from our future
generations! - (Data Living Planet Report 2000, WWF)
9Other Implications of Overpopulation
- Wealth Gap ? poverty in developing countries
- Uneven distribution of food, medical care,
education resources, family planning services
10Environmental Impact of Population
Affluence (A)
Technology (T)
Population size (P)
(environmental impact done by the technologies
used to supply the resources)
Impact (I)
I PAT
How can we reduce the environmental impact (I)?
11Population Control
- UN Conference on Population and Development,
Cairo 1994 (15,000 leaders and representatives
from 179 countries) - By 2054 world population stabilized at 7.8
billion - By 2015 everyone on Earth should have
- Access to family planning
- Primary education for all children 6-11 yrs of
age - Increased involvement of men in child-rearing and
family planning
12Population Projections
High TFR (2.5)
Medium TFR (2.0)
Low TFR (1.6)
POPULATION (billions)
Current worldwide TFR 2.8
YEAR
Aim is TFR of 1.6
High
Low
Medium
13Methods for Controlling Growth
- A government can alter size and growth rate of
its population by changing any of the 3 basic
demographic variables - Births
- Deaths
- Migrations
- Most developed countries now have relatively low
birth and death rates. - Most developing countries have relatively low
death rates but high birth rates.
14Crude Births and Crude Death Rates
15Controlling Migration
- Only a few countries allow large annual
immigration, e.g. Canada, Australia, USA. - Some migration is involuntary involves refugees
displaced by - War
- Natural disasters (earthquakes, flooding,
drought) - Environmental degradation (desertification,
deforestation, resources shortage).
16Empowerment of Women
- Women tend to have fewer and healthier children
when - They have access to education and paid jobs
outside the home - They live in societies where they have rights
17Controlling Birth Rates
- Focus of efforts to control population growth
decreasing birth rates - Two general approaches
- 1. Economic Development may reduce the number of
children a couple desires if - They have increased access to education
- They have more economic security
- They do not need to consider children as old age
security - 2. Family Planning helps people regulate the
number of children they want to have and when
181. Economic Development
- Demographers studied western European countries
that industrialized in the 19th Century.
- Developed hypothesis of population change
demographic transition. - As countries become industrialized, first their
death rates then their birth rates decline. - Encourage developing countries make the
transition - ? Help to reduce population growth
19The Demographic Transition
Rates (per 1000 per year)
Low Growth Rates
ZPG
Negative
Decreasing
Increasing Growth Rates
20The Demographic Transition
- Four distinct stages
- Pre-industrial stage harsh living conditions
- High birth rates to counteract high infant
mortalities - Little population growth
- Transitional stage industrialization begins
- Death rates drop
- Birth rates remain high
- ? Rapid population growth
- Industrial stage industrialization widespread
- Birth rate drops
- ? Growth rate slows
- Post-industrial stage relative high living
standard - Birth rates falls further, equaling death rate ?
ZPG - Then birth rate lt death rate ? Population
decreases
21Developed and Developing Countries
Population Reference Bureau
- Most developing countries transitional phase.
- Most developed countries industrial stage, a few
in post-industrial stage.
222. Family Planning
- Such programs provide educational and clinical
services to help couples (how many children to
have and when to have them), including - Birth control contraception or
sterilization - Birth spacing
- Health care for pregnant
- women and infants
Various forms of contraception
China has been more successful at slowing
population growth than India.
23Case Study China
- 1960s Chinese government realized that without
strict population control ? mass starvation - 1970s efforts made to slow population growth
- 1979 one-child per family policy introduced
- Couples urged to get married late and have only
1 child - Married couples free access to free
sterilization, contraceptives, and abortion - Married couples who pledge to have 1 child extra
food, larger pensions, better housing, free
medical care, salary bonuses, free school tuition
for the child, etc (couples will be deprived of
all benefits if they break the pledge) - 1972 to 2001 TFR 5.7 to 1.8 children per woman
- Yet, compulsory birth control policy
Controversial!
24Chinas Future Population
- China has 1/5 of worlds population
- 11 million people added each year, but only has
- 7 of worlds fresh water
- 3 of worlds forests
- 2 of worlds soils
- Greying population who will take care of the
elderly? - Gender imbalance
- 117 boys 100 girls in 2000
- ? Men will outnumber women in China by 60
million!