stevecook172001 wrote:There is enough of a problem getting perfectly intelligent people to even admit that there is a population problem.
I used to think it was a "population problem". Now after many more years thought and study around these issues I've come to the conclusion the actual number of people, whether it's 5bn, 7bn or 9bn is
not the problem. It's quite possible for a relatively low number of people to screw things up and quite possible for a far higher number to be supported adequately. The population range we're looking at just isn't that big a deal with compared with the range of behaviour. If the change from 7 to 9bn is a range of 30%, yet the range of consumption is an order of magnitude then population is 3% of the problem compared to behaviour's 97%.
To consider some numbers, the US consumes 18.7 million barrels of oil per day, 22 barrels per person per year. It's 11 barrels per person per year in Germany, 6.5 for Mexico and just 1 barrel per person per year in India. The actual number of people is trivial given the 22-fold difference between the US and India.
Another way to think about it is that if the US population fell by 100 million, they would free up enough oil to support the consumption of an extra 2.2bn people living an Indian lifestyle! Or if the US halved its oil consumption, down to the level of Germany's (the horror!), it would free up enough supply for an extra 3.4bn Indians or an extra half billion people living a Mexican quality of life. It's all about consumption/behaviour.
The final important point is that as the population increases from 7bn to 9bn, the distribution of consumption changes. The extra 2bn aren't added uniformly to the current consumption distribution, most of them are added in Africa, where their consumption levels are very low. 30% more people on the planet does not lead to 30% more consumption.