The Timaru Herald

Grim reading in population stats

- Gwynne Dyer

Imust have missed the memo, because there was no newborn baby picked out at random last Tuesday to be the designated 8 billionth human being. Perhaps they finally realised how tacky that journalist­ic device was, or maybe they just got tired of nagging us. Anyway, happy Eight Billionth, whoever you are.

After a long bad patch, the population news is getting a bit better. For the past 60 years the world’s population growth has been accelerati­ng: it took 14 years to go from 3 billion to 4 billion people (1960-74), only 13 more years to get to 5 billion (1987), and a mere 12 years to 6 billion (1999).

It also took 12 years to reach 7 billion (2011), but here we are at 8 billion, and that has only taken 11 years. Neverthele­ss, it really is going to slow down now: it will be a full 24 years before we reach 9 billion (2046), and another 25 years before we hit 10 billion (2071).

Ten billion. That’s insane: a fivefold increase in the number of human beings in little more than one century. But it was probably inevitable.

Simple public health measures (more babies surviving) and better medicine and diet (longer lifespans) were bound to lead to a couple of generation­s of high-speed population growth. Then women’s education, birth control technologi­es, and urbanisati­on slowed it down again.

In fact, the United Nations Population Division’s latest forecast is that the world’s population will stabilise at 10.4 billion people in 2086. It probably won’t start going down significan­tly until the end of the 21st century or later, but at least the direction of travel is changing.

Two-thirds of the global population lives in countries where lifetime fertility is already below 2.1 births per woman, the level at which there is zero growth of population. It takes a decade or so for this to show up in the gross population figures, but 61 countries will have declining population­s by 2050.

India’s population, now 1.4 billion, will peak around 1.8 billion in 2063, and will be back down to

1.5 billion by the end of the century. China’s population, now also 1.4 billion, officially starts falling next year – some say it has been falling for years – and it will be down by at least half by 2100.

However, the global figures conceal an alarming discrepanc­y between the African continent and almost everywhere else. The ‘‘stabilisat­ion’’ in 2086 is just the point at which the falling population­s in most other parts of the world cancel out the still-rising population­s in most of Africa.

A few countries, like Morocco and South Africa, will only add 10 or 20 million people between now and the end of the century, but most African countries will at least double their population and many will grow threefold or fourfold.

The African continent now contains about 18% of the human population. By 2100 it will host 40% of the world’s people: about 4.2 billion human beings. If that prediction comes true, then a great many of them will still be poor, and some will also be very hungry.

They will still be poor because, although most of their economies are growing, their population­s are growing almost as fast (or, in a few cases, even faster). And many will be hungry because, while Africa could probably feed twice its present population with the right investment (and no climate change), it couldn’t feed three times as many.

Moreover, the investment­s are not being made and droughts, floods and cyclones are already devastatin­g much of the continent. Prediction­s about the scale and speed of climate change are estimates of probabilit­y, not precise forecasts. Similarly, prediction­s about both demography and economies grow increasing­ly unreliable as the time span lengthens.

Neverthele­ss, the UN Population Division’s forecasts make grim reading, especially if you read between the lines. We are probably way past the long-term sustainabl­e carrying capacity of our planet in terms of both population numbers and per capita energy use, and yet they will still be going up for most of this century.

So the recent article about falling sperm counts in the journal Human Reproducti­on Update offers hope (of a sort) from an unexpected source. The rate of decline has been speeding up since 1973, and is now more than 2.6% per year. The average sperm concentrat­ion, for men all over the world, is now less than half what it was in 1973.

It’s clearly an environmen­tal issue. Is the planet trying to tell us something?

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