Overpopulation
COP27 is coming up. One topic that wasn't negotiated in COP26 was
population. Currently, global population
is increasing with 80 million people every year.
Smart and influential people argues that aging population is a way bigger problem than over-population
since new generations will not be able to support their elders and keep up
progress.
I believe they are mistaken in two ways:
- More people requires more resources and I don't believe the world has enough.
- Automation renders a lot of people unable to find sustainable jobs.
Kimberly Nicholas, PhD in Sustainability Science,
argues
that one of the four most impactful things we in the over-consuming world can
do o lower emissions is to have less children.
This should not only apply to the over-consuming world, since people in
developing countries tend to migrate to developed countries and hence become
high emitters like the rest of us.
Kaya
There is a simple formula for calculating global carbon emissions in economic
terms. It is called the Kaya Identity Scenario Prognosticator
and it is named after it's inventor, Yoichi Kaya, a Japanese Energy Economist.
Lowering any of the four categories, will lower our Carbon emissions. Getting
any single one of them down to zero will completely stop our emissions.
Increasing and Decreasing
Currently, two of the categories or decreasing while two are increasing. It's
not hard to understand that this is not an optimal solution.
Carbon Emissions per Unit of Energy
Furthest to the right, we have Carbon Emissions per Unit of Energy. This is the
one most of the fuzz is about. How can we lower the amount of carbon emitted
per amount of energy. The answer is simple, but the implementation is not. We
need to replace fossil energy with fossil free energy, solar, wind, biofuel,
and nuclear. The only controversy is nuclear which I will not dwell on since
I already wrote an article on how
I think we should go all in on Nuclear.
But, thankfully not every country are as squeamish about nuclear as we Swedes and the
Germans are. France is leading the charge and China is planning 150 new nuclear plants.
Energy use per GDP, efficiency
This is how much energy we get for every dollar we spend. This is also called
efficiency and it's something we are very good at. We keep making better
motors, batteries, production methods, etc. There is nothing controversial in this area. We would do this anyway since it is good economy to be efficient.
Economic Growth
This is where the controversy starts to grow. Economists wants growth to be
high since it will allow TODO, while many ecologists wants to stop growth (at
least in the developed world) since they don't think it is sustainable. I agree
that in the developed world, we certainly have room to lower our consumption,
but I'm not sure what it would do to our economy since so many things are based
on this ever increasing growth. But, most of the world just want to reach
a level that doesn't force them to struggle every day. This is a tough nut to
crack.
Economic growth also increases with migration. When people migrate to higher
consumption countries, they increase their consumption.
Population
Finally, population. It's increasing by 80 million people yearly, and it's
expected to peak somewhere around 10 billion people. This is an immense problem
that it seems that no one wants to talk about! It's an ecosystem out of
balance.
Population vs Warming
It is eerie how much population correlates with temperature.
Global Unemployment
Our increased efficiency also increases global unemployment. Yuval Noah Harari has predicted the rise of the useless class when better automation and AI makes many people redundant.
"people devoid of any economic, political or even artistic value, who contribute nothing to the prosperity, power and glory of society. This "useless class" will not merely be unemployed — it will be unemployable".
Out of Resources
More people requires more food, more transportation, more, more and more!
Earth is finite and according to "The World Counts" we are running out fast.
https://www.theworldcounts.com/challenges/planet-earth
Vaclav Smil writes in his book, How the World Really Works, that agriculture without carbon emitting fertilizers can only suppport around 4 billion people.
Demographic Transition Model
The Demographic Transition Model shows us that population growth is a temporary phenomena, but will the growth end in time? We are currently somewhere in phase 3.
Growth will end for one reason or another. It could be because we decide to solve it or that we run out of resources.
Births vs Deaths
In this graph we see that the number of births has topped out at around 140 million per year while the number of deaths is only increasing slightly. This is due to a lot lower childhood mortality and because we are living longer across the globe.
Less people need to be born
Less people need to be born. How do we achieve that?
It is not as controversial as killing people or letting them die. A person who isn't conceived doesn't have any human rights.
An uncontroversial idea is contraceptives to everyone who wants them.
Another popular argument is to educate women since educated and working women
apparently have fewer children.
More controversial is legislation that discourages having many children.
China's controversial 1 child policy was a version of this. It's been abandoned and China now encourages 2 and allows 3 children to stem its aging population.
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3141860/china-confirms-all-citizens-can-now-have-third-child-amid
More people need to die
More people need to die. Luckily, we are all mortal and we will eventually all
die. But, is there any way to speed it up without violating human rights?
Abortion? Euthanasia? What else?
The world counts
Books
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