Thursday, September 26, 2019

World Population


World Population



There are more than 7 billion people on Earth now, and roughly one in eight of us doesn't have enough to eat. The question of how many people the Earth can support is a long-standing one that becomes more intense as the world's population—and our use of natural resources—keeps booming.

Population debates like this are why, in 2011, National Geographic published a series called "7 Billion" on world population, its trends, implications, and future. After years of examining global environmental issues such as climate change, energy, food supply, and freshwater, we thought the time was ripe for a deep discussion of people and how we are connected to all these other issues—issues that are getting increased attention today, amid the new population projections.

After all, how many of us there are, how many children we have, how long we live, and where and how we live affect virtually every aspect of the planet upon which we rely to survive: the land, oceans, fisheries, forests, wildlife, grasslands, rivers and lakes, groundwater, air quality, atmosphere, weather, and climate.

Even though more than 800 million people worldwide don’t have enough to eat now, the mass starvation envisioned hasn't happened. This is primarily because advances in agriculture—including improved plant breeding and the use of chemical fertilizers—have kept global harvests increasing fast enough to mostly keep up with demand.

As part of this human-dominated era, the past half century also has been referred to as a period of "Great Acceleration" by Will Steffen at International Geosphere-Biosphere Program. Besides a nearly tripling of human population since the end of World War II, our presence has been marked by a dramatic increase in human activity—the damming of rivers, soaring water use, expansion of cropland, increased use of irrigation and fertilizers, a loss of forests, and more motor vehicles. There also has been a sharp rise in the use of coal, oil, and gas, and a rapid increase in the atmosphere of methane and carbon dioxide, greenhouse gases that result from changes in land use and the burning of such fuels.

One of our biggest impacts is agriculture. Whether we can grow enough food sustainably for an expanding world population also presents an urgent challenge, and this becomes only more so in light of these new population projections. Where will food for an additional 2 to 3 billion people come from when we are already barely keeping up with 7 billion?

As climate change damages crop yields and extreme weather disrupts harvests, growing enough food for our expanding population has become what the 2014 World Food Prize Symposium calls "the greatest challenge in human history."

Population is not just about numbers of people. Demographers typically focus on three dimensions—fertility, mortality, and migration—when examining population trends. Fertility examines how many children a woman bears in her lifetime, mortality looks at how long we live, and migration focuses on where we live and move. Each of these population qualities influences the nature of our presence and impact across the planet.
Improved education, especially for girls, is cited as a key driver of declining family size. Having light at night can become a gateway to better education for millions of young people and the realization that opportunities and choices besides bearing many children can await.

20 Things to do and pass it on to others to lower your impact of the environment:

1.    Use glass straws or stainless straws instead of plastic ones. Each day more than 500,000,000 plastic straws are used in the United States. The Last Plastic Straw initiative seeks to activate citizens through a grassroots campaign to encourage individuals to push for change in restaurant protocol and practices in their local communities around the world.
2.    Use cloth napkins for all meals.
3.    Use public transportation when you can. Avoid air travel when possible, as it uses large amounts of fossil fuels and contributes to greenhouse gases.
4.    Unplug chargers, refusing to use energy when it’s not even working for us. Put the kids in charge for increased success.
5.    Volunteer where we can, to inform and inspire others.
6.    Wash laundry in cold water and hang dry when the weather allows.
7.    Reuse cloths (and old t-shirts that are too stained and torn for hand-me-downs) for cleaning cloths around the house.
8.    Bring your own reusable bags to the farmers market or grocery. Vendors love it, and so do we. 
9.    When you consume meat, make sure it’s from a reputable source or farm where animals are treated humanely, can roam free, and are not given hormones or antibiotics.
10. Shop for local, organic produce. We choose to support our local farmers markets for so many reasons, but one reason is NO pesky stickers on each piece of food. That’s a small step to reduce your impact, but one your body reaps the benefits.
11. Choose organic/ethical clothing as much as possible – reducing chemicals, formaldehyde, phthalates coming into your home.
12. Avoid single-use items. Our oceans are filled with plastic bottles and items that were used short term. Thinking twice about buying short-term items in plastic is one of the most impactful green choices you can make.
13. Demand for climate solution for this 2020 election from our candidates!
14. Change to energy-efficient light bulbs
15. Get a home or workplace energy audit to identify where you can make the most energy-saving gains
16. Grow your own vegetables in your backyard
17. Eat more meat-free meals
18. Install solar panels at home or your business place to reduce fossil fuel consumption
19. Vote for leaders at all levels of government who take climate change seriously. They should commit to setting science-based targets to reduce harmful carbon emissions, implementing clear plans to reach those targets, adapting to climate change and shifting to a clean-energy economy.
20. Start or led a local movement in climate change.

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