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At the close of the 21st century, more than 11 billion people will inhabit this planet, according to the latest forecast from the United Nations’ population division. The forecast underlines President Obama’s assertion at the announcement of U.S. EPA’s Clean Power Plan: “We only get one home. We only get one planet. There’s no plan B.”

But while the number itself seems staggering, the real questions may lie in the unevenness of population growth: Where is the population growing the fastest? And which age groups will have the greatest population?

“Whether it is 10 billion or 11 billion, it is a big number and this has huge implications for food security, for resource management, for the environment,” said K. Bruce Newbold, director at the School of Geography and Earth Sciences at McMaster University in Canada. “I hate to be a doomsayer, but I do have concerns whether we are prepared for that.” Though population growth is slowing, the total world population itself is increasing, he said, and in areas that are already very vulnerable, like Africa.

This revision to previous U.N. forecasts incorporated new data from recent national surveys and demographic and health surveys. According to the revised estimates, India is set to overtake China six years earlier than previously predicted, but both countries face the specter of aging populations.

Climate change multiplies stress
China faces it more than India, because of China’s one-child policy, which brought fertility rates down significantly even as life expectancy continues to improve. While the two countries will continue to dominate the total population in terms of sheer numbers, Africa will see the sharpest increases in population, accounting for more than half of the global population growth over the next 35 years, said the report, which includes predictions for the years 2030, 2050 and 2100.

All of the 48 least-developed countries, of which 27 are in Africa, will witness steep population growth. Nigeria is expected to emerge as the third most populous country by 2050.

When you add the potential for climate change into that equation, it creates additional problems, Newbold said. Changes in precipitation patterns and possibly decreased precipitation in some parts of Africa, which will be unable to support crops and human habitation in the future, would have repercussions, said Roger-Mark De Souza, director of population, environmental security and resilience at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Even today, 20 million people in the Sahel region in Africa, which extends across the continent, are food insecure, he added.

The composition of the population will also play a crucial role in determining how countries deal with the stress posed by ballooning populations, experts noted. “Population is growing not just through childbearing but also because of longevity,” explained Sarah Harper, director at the Oxford Institute of Population Ageing at the University of Oxford.

Since the population growth is largely a result of better health outcomes, it means we will be adding to the ranks of vulnerable populations at both ends of the age spectrum—the very young and also the very old. The countries that will host these populations are already struggling to provide decent standards of living for their people.

The oldest of the old increase rapidly
The dramatic extension of life spans across the world, increasing from 70 years in 2010 to 2015 to 83 years in 2095 to 2100, may seem like unadulterated good news, but what that means for quality of life is not as straightforward.

The number of old people, above 60 years, will more than triple, increasing from 901 million in 2015 to 3.2 billion in 2100. The oldest of the old, above 80 years, are projected to increase at an even faster pace, their numbers increasing sevenfold by the turn of this century.

“When you look at changes in the environment and climate change impacts, those who are most vulnerable to those changes are the very young and the very old,” De Souza said. “This is true not just in places like Africa but across the world. We know that heat waves in Europe have led to the deaths of elderly people,” De Souza added. Europe currently hosts the highest proportion of elderly people in its population.

While it was beyond the scope of this report, analysis of population growth also takes into account how rapid urbanization would change the face of human settlements and affect their ability to adapt to climate change. In 2007, the United Nations predicted an explosion in urban populations, which it said could be as much as the three-quarters of the world population by 2050, mostly residing in developing countries.

China’s aging population and rapid migration to coastal urban centers will make the country more susceptible to effects of climate change like rising sea levels and extreme weather events, recent research by scientists at University College London and experts from the United States, China and India has found.

These predictions are important for adaptation because they help us plan ahead, De Souza said, and there is a need to understand population dynamics in the context of resilience.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/can-the-planet-support-11-billion-people/

Related piece from FB's IFLS Page

Earth needs to find room for a substantial increase in the human population over the next century. A new model indicates that if current growth trends don't change dramatically, there will be around 4 billion extra people knocking around the planet by 2100.

Based on current models of growth, the human population will boom up to 9.7 billion in 2050 from its current figure of 7.3 billion. Even more shockingly, it will continue to expand to 11.2 billion by the end of the century if fertility rates do not drop. These findings were announced by John R. Wilmoth, director of the United Nations Population Division, at the 2015 Joint Statistical Meetings in Seattle.

The alarming findings were made using population models of demographic change from historical data. The resulting population estimates range between 9.5 and 13.3 billion people in 2100. This is the scenario that the world seriously facesif fertility rates continue at their current rate. The chief contributor to the population increase are regions in sub-Saharan Africa.

While only predictions, the statistics are important for policymakers to keep in mind when planning for the future. For example, the model predicts that the U.S. will be accommodating 1.5 million extra people each year until the end of the century. By 2100, the population will have increased by a third: This is an increase from 322 million civilians to 450 million.

It is these sorts of findings that politicians should be paying attention to in order to better prepare nations for the increased number of people they will need to accommodate and feed. A major upheaval of policies regarding energy, health care, jobs and pensions will likely be required when the increase in population stresses national governments.Issues such as pollution management and crime will also likely become more complicated.

Developing countries – such as China, Brazil and India – will possibly face some of the most dramatic social changes. Their populations are composed mostly of young people, and as their population ages and grows, the question will be whether there is support in place for this longer lifestyle.

http://www.iflscience.com/environment/booming-global-population-predicted-reach-11-billion-2100
 
Africa will see the sharpest increases in population

Reproduction and population dynamics at the global level are exactly the same as those at the "oh shit, the gutter trash down the street with an absent thug ex-con father and drug addicted, deadbeat, welfare mother who already have 10 kids are about to spew out one more, wish they wouldn't cuz i've had enough trouble dealing with the onslaught of crime and strife the spawn have already unleashed on this otherwise decent neighborhood" level. It's pretty amazing really.

Have sociologists studied this one yet? Figure it's too politically incorrect to take a serious, thoughtful look at. Why does stupid trash reproduce soooo much more? Some of it is an ignorance of safe sex practices, sure, but i wouldn't think that explains all of it, certainly not to the absurd disparity we see it among various cultures/groups. I mean they teach taht shit even to poor dipshits in american schools, yet they continue to ignore it and create more problems. Animals.


Anyways, i'll be dead by then, so who gives a shit.

And there's no answer as to how to fix this, so why stress ourselves. Every new generation should just selfishly enjoy how good they have it and ignore how shitty it'll be for future ones. Fuck em, not much else you can do really.
 
Earth needs to find room for a substantial increase in the human population over the next century. A new model indicates that if current growth trends don't change dramatically, there will be around 4 billion extra people knocking around the planet by 2100.

Umm, no, the Earth doesn't need to do shit. It was fine til humans came along.

Simply put, people need to stop breeding like flies. They need to put more forethought and consideration into why they choose to bring another life into the world. People should have reason for reproducing, not treating it as a possoble side effect of sex.

We are perfectly capable of teaching personal responsibility so that future generations can enjoy a better world. It simply takes discipline and resolve, things our society is quickly losing with today's entitled, I've Got To Have It Now mentality. Humanity can get back on track if it genuinely wants to do it...unfortunately, it is far more profitable to appeal to laziness and comfort.
 
Just to cheer you up (I'm kidding), see the below lecture on exponential growth from David Suzuki. Good lecture, but the guy has 5 kids himself, so his human nature is clearly overruling his highly educated brain.

We survived this long as a species by fucking like bunnies and being clever. We will potentially end as a species because we continue to fuck like bunnies, and the damage caused by the expansion of our clever technology, our clever warfare, and our clever agriculture is wrecking the human life support of that intricately and delicately balanced spaceship—our only home—the Earth.

The developments of the last 200 years are only a blip in terms of the millions of years we've been evolving. I'm sure we'll continue fucking like bunnies and cleverly overthrowing each other to the very end. We are officially living in the sixth great extinction (look it up). So strap in, strap on, and enjoy the Hell ride while it lasts. :nana: :dead::dead::dead:

 
Scientists need to develop a virus that wipes out the majority of the Earth's population, leaving the desireable elements unscathed.
 
bv
-Insert offensive HIV/AIDS joke-

As far as plagues go...that one was a bit of a let down. I had high hopes for it in the early to mid-eighties, but then it sort of dissipated. Not to mention, those fucking pharmaceutical companies started giving away anti-retroviral medications to the filthy bastards who were infected with it. Nearly stopped it altogether. It was almost the perfect virus, killing perverts, drug addicts and
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by the millions. What a fucking disappointment.


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