1 / 46

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright. Chapter 6. The Human Population: Dimensions PPT by Clark E. Adams. Human Population Growth and the Consequences. Human population expansion and its cause Different worlds Consequences of population growth and affluence

Télécharger la présentation

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright Chapter 6 The Human Population: Dimensions PPT by Clark E. Adams

  2. Human Population Growth and the Consequences • Human population expansion and its cause • Different worlds • Consequences of population growth and affluence • Dynamics of population growth

  3. Human Population Expansion and Its Cause • Reasons for the patterns of growth • Biotic potential exceeds environmental resistance: birth rates exceed death rates • There are 6.3 billion people on Earth • If each one stood up, pronounced their name, and sat down • It would take 600 years to complete roll call • By 2025 it will take 1,000 years to complete this exercise

  4. World Population over the Centuries 9,000 human beings added to the planet every hour

  5. Reasons for the Human Population Explosion • Causes of disease recognized • Improvements in nutrition • Discovery of antibiotics • Improvements in medicine • Increase in number of women who actually reach child-bearing age • Short doubling times in some countries

  6. Changing Human Survivorship Curves: Went from B to A A % Survival B Birth Age Death

  7. World Population Growth and Absolute Growth

  8. Population Projections Based on Different Fertility Assumptions

  9. America West Germany Africa 14 5 258 Average Number of Children, Grandchildren, and Great Grandchildren

  10. Different Worlds • Rich nations, poor nations • Population growth in rich and poor nations • Different populations, different problems

  11. Human Poverty Index for Developing Countries

  12. Economic Categories Based on Per Capita Gross National Income (see Fig. 5-4) • High-income, highly developed, industrialized countries • United States, Japan, Canada • Average GNI per capita = $26,710 • Middle-income, moderately developed countries • Latin America, South Africa, China • Average GNI per capita = $1,850

  13. Economic Categories Based on Per Capita Gross National Income (see Fig. 5-4) • Low-income, developing countries • Western and central Africa, India, central Asia • Average GNI per capita = $430

  14. Disparities • Developed countries • 16% of the world’s population • Control 81% of the world’s wealth • Low-income developing countries • 41% of the world’s population • Control 3.4% of the world’s gross national income • Difference in per capita income: 62 to 1!

  15. Population Increase in Developed and Developing Countries

  16. Population Data for Selected Countries (Table 5-3)

  17. Different Populations, Different Problems • Human pressure on the environment caused by three factors • Population size • Affluence • Technology

  18. Ecological Footprints by World Region • The average American places at least 20 times the demand on Earth’s resources as does an average person in Bangladesh Fig. 5.7 here

  19. Global Conditions for a Sustainable Population • Lower fertility rates (stabilize population) • Consumption must decrease • Protect the environment (stewardly action must increase)

  20. Consequences of Population Growth and Affluence • The developing countries • Affluence

  21. Developing or Developed Nations? • High fertility rates • High consumptive lifestyles: use 80% of world’s wealth • Intense poverty • Eat high on the food chain

  22. Developing or Developed Nations? • Long doubling times • High environmental degradation • Twenty percent of the world’s population

  23. Basic Human Needs • Drinkable Water • Edible Food • Safe Housing • Health Care • An Education • A Job

  24. The Developing Countries • Reform the system of land ownership • Intensify cultivation of existing land to increase production per unit area • Open new land to farm • Move to cities and seek employment • Engage in illicit activities for income • Move to other countries How do these “solutions” aggravate the problems?

  25. Growing Cities

  26. Consequences of Exploding Populations in the Developing World

  27. Consequences of Exploding Populations deforestation resource depletion loss of agricultural land biodiversity disease pest resistance population migration irrigation wetlands MORE More Population Causes LESS

  28. Affluence in the United States • Consume the largest share of 11 of 20 major commodities • Eat more than three times the global average in meat • Lead the world in paper consumption • Environment improves with increasing affluence

  29. Affluence in the United States • Enables wealthy to clean up immediate environment by transferring waste to more distant locations. • Affluent isolate themselves and unaware of the environmental stresses caused by their consumptive lifestyles.

  30. Dynamics of Population Growth • Population profiles • Future populations • Population momentum • The demographic transition

  31. Population Profiles of the United States

  32. Population Profile for United States Note increasing elderly population.

  33. Future World Populations

  34. Future United States Populations

  35. Projecting Future Populations: Developed Countries

  36. Population Projections: Developing Nations

  37. Comparing Projected Populations (see Fig. 5-17) Fertility Rate < 2 Fertility Rate > 2

  38. Population Momentum • Countries like Iraq will continue to grow for 50–60 years even after the total fertility rate is reduced to replacement level.

  39. The Demographic Transition

  40. Calculating Fertility Rates and Doubling Times (CBR – CDR)/10 = Rate of increase or decrease in population per 1,000 per year 70/Rate of Increase = Doubling Time

  41. Calculating Fertility Rates and Doubling Times: Practice (see Table 5-5)

  42. Demographic Transition Comparisons

  43. By the Year 2000 • 65 out of 117 countries will not be able to feed their own people • One billion people will be living in cities that cannot support its inhabitants • 400 million more women will be in need of child spacing services

  44. By the Year 2000 (continued) • 600 million new jobs will need to be created for new entrants into the workforce • We will need twice as much fresh water • 300 million additional children will need teachers, books, and classrooms

  45. End of Chapter 5

More Related