July 14th, 2009

Overpopulation is not the problem – overconsumption by the rich few is

overpopulation
Creative Commons License Photo credit: Hipnos

I often hear people saying that overpopulation is the main problem to our environmental and ecological problems. Some people even claim that it’s responsible for global warming. I also agreed with this idea before. But after reading more about the subject over the years I have changed my mind.

The rich countries in the “North”, i.e. the West, have a “rapidly decreasing” population which is “expected to decline over the next forty years.” Developing countries such as India, China and most of Africa on the other hand is where we will see future population numbers increasing.

And yes. It seems so easy to blame countries with an overwhelming rising population for being responsible for wrecking our planet, climate and environment. Because surely more people must mean more pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Right?

Not really. The West is responsible for about 80% of the worlds CO2 increase. An average person living in Great Britain will in only 11 days emit as much CO2 as an average person in Bangladesh will during a whole year. And just a single power plant in West Yorkshire in Great Britain will produce more CO2 every year than all the 139 million people combined living in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia and Mozambique.

As Fred Pearce from the Yale Environment 360 blog notes, only a small portion of the world’s people are using most of the planets resources as well as producing the most of the greenhouse gases. And those are living in the West:

“The world’s population quadrupled to six billion people during the 20th century. It is still rising and may reach 9 billion by 2050. Yet for at least the past century, rising per-capita incomes have outstripped the rising head count several times over. And while incomes don’t translate precisely into increased resource use and pollution, the correlation is distressingly strong.

[…]By almost any measure, a small proportion of the world’s people take the majority of the world’s resources and produce the majority of its pollution. Take carbon dioxide emissions — a measure of our impact on climate but also a surrogate for fossil fuel consumption. Stephen Pacala, director of the Princeton Environment Institute, calculates that the world’s richest half-billion people — that’s about 7 percent of the global population — are responsible for 50 percent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions. Meanwhile the poorest 50 percent are responsible for just 7 percent of emissions.”

According to Pearce overpopulation in the developing countries is not the problem. Instead the increasing overconsumption among the planets 7% richest people and countries is to be blamed. And he is not alone in claiming this. George Monbiot, Europe’s leading green commentator, also agrees with this viewpoint. As Monbiot notes in a recent published article on the Guardian:

“As one the graphs King displayed demonstrated, and as the UN and independent scientists predict, the world’s population is expected to peak at around 9 billion by 2060 and then to decline to around 8.5 billion by 2100.

Of course the bisophere can ill-afford to carry these numbers, and they will load an extra 40 or 50% of pressure onto every environmental constraint. It’s an issue, in other words. But the issue?

Until the recession struck, the global rate of economic growth was 3.8%. The world’s governments hope and pray that we’ll be back on this track as soon as possible. Population, of course, is one of the components of economic growth, but the global population growth rate is currently 1.2%.

It’s responsible, in other words, for one-third of normal economic growth. The rest is supplied by rising consumption. Consumption, on this measure, bears twice as much responsibility for pressure on resources and ecosystems as population growth.”

Let’s take a look at the ecological footprint between developing countries and developed countries in the West. An ecological footprint is the estimate on how much land is required to provide you and me with food and other resources as well as cleaning up our pollution. The global average ecological footprint is 2.7 hectares per person.

Sweden, my own country, has an ecological footprint of 5.1 hectares. The UK is on 5.3. Australia has 7.8 and Canada has an average of 7.1 hectares. The United Arab Emirates and the United States of America are on the top spot with an ecological footprint of 9.5 and 9.4. Developing countries such as China only has an ecological footprint of 2.1 hectares while India is on 0.9. And most countries in Africa are around or below 1.0 hectares.

Pearce gives even more examples of unfair consumption between the rich and poor countries:

“Americans gobble up more than 120 kilograms of meat a year per person, compared to just 6 kilos in India, for instance.”

“Just five countries are likely to produce most of the world’s population growth in the coming decades: India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Ethiopia. The carbon emissions of one American today are equivalent to those of around four Chinese, 20 Indians, 30 Pakistanis, 40 Nigerians, or 250 Ethiopians.”

“A woman in rural Ethiopia can have ten children and her family will still do less damage, and consume fewer resources, than the family of the average soccer mom in Minnesota or Munich. In the unlikely event that her ten children live to adulthood and have ten children of their own, the entire clan of more than a hundred will still be emitting less carbon dioxide than you or I.”

Just like Monbiot and Pearce claims overpopulation is not the problem. Even if we were to get a zero population growth around the world it wouldn’t help us against the climate crisis. Instead the overconsumption among the rich few in the world is the main problem which we must deal with.

Climate Progress writes: “To avoid catastrophic global warming impacts, the rich countries need to cut greenhouse gas emissions 80% to 90% by mid-century. The developing countries (not including China) mostly must slow emissions growth, peak by mid-century, then decline — while ending the vast majority of deforestation by 2020. China must peak its emissions by 2020 and then reduce after that, first slowly, then quickly by mid-century.”

Overpopulation is only seen as a major problem because it’s the only thing we in the West can blame the developing countries for.

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About Simon Leufstedt

Simon Leufstedt is the founder and editor of Green Blog – an environment blog with authors from around the world. He is also the admin of Enviro Space - a place to meet, discuss and interact with other people who share your interests and ideas. Simon has previously studied Global Environmental Justice and is currently busy working with the Swedish TckTckTck organisation and learning everything there is to know about Human Ecology at the Lund University in Sweden. You can follow Simon on Twitter.
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  • Dale
    Yeah, I guess that's why there are so many endangered species on the way out, because encroachment of habitat by humans is not a problem.

    This is a shallow analysis of a complex problem. There's far more to overpopulation than mere consumption, and consumption is not static in the first place. Over time every one will want to consume more. Someone in Bangladesh may have a footprint of only 0.9 hectares, but how many people want to live like that? How many Bangladeshis even want to live like that? Many of them are immigrating to Western countries so they don't have to live like that.

    I'm not saying we in the West shouldn't strive to live less profligately. For myself, I consume far less meat than most Americans, and live rather austerely by comparison, though I'm sure my footprint is still much larger than most people not in the West.

    Still, overpopulation depends on many factors. It doesn't matter at all if a woman with ten children has a smaller footprint than a single American if she has no way to get enough water for her family, for example. It also depends on whether you value large animals like tigers, elephants, rhinos, leopards, etc. It's important to point out the consumption of the West, but simplistic and unrealistic arguments are not the way to do it.
  • Overpopulation is logically the main cause of climate change, species extinctions, poverty, psychologically damaged children, unhappy lifestyles and even many wars (through land ownership and pop expansion) etc. Past tense, we are in the middle of the symptoms right now. To reduce the pop is the main solution. All the other measures mentioned such as carbon trading and technology-based solution will be negligible in effect and will be negated totally by the rising population of the entire Earth as a whole. Only the blind, know-it-alls and wiseacres fail to see this truth. Without a reduction in population by natural and voluntary means the Earth will impose it upon us itself with catastrophic global and frequent natural disasters the likes of which we have never seen. The Indonesian tsunami in 2004 was just an appetizer.
  • We witness the immense struggle of wildlife to survive in an increasingly hostile, modern world, invaded and destroyed by the human species

    The Human race is guilty of conservational, ecological and environmental crimes. What we are doing to all other species is murder! It is ecocide!

    In less than 100 years of so called civilisation using technology, we have managed to destroy what took more than 3 billion years to evolve. Entire species are being wiped out. We kill everything we touch,have run out of space, land, soil, air, water and landfill sites. The only thing we haven't run out of, unfortunately, is people. 7 billion and rising fast !

    The main culprit of this ecological disaster is religion, Christianity being the worst, as it keeps the prolific uteruses busy, spitting children out at a fast rate. And when they can't procreate naturally, in-vitro fertilisation is there, readily available, speeding up the breeding process, revving it up to turbo breeding.


    http://helpingthem.co.uk/index.php/topic,114.0....
  • franksands
    Dear Santtu, Some of us have no other choice, but to own two cars and drive to work every single day. Hardly convenient and nice, but what are you going to do, when the public transport is not a choice, even though we live in the metropolitan area. If you don't need a car, it doesn't mean that they can't be absolutely necessary to other people. People like you totally ruin the green ideology, pretending to have nice solutions and making laconic comments, but having no clue whatsoever as to the realities of life.
  • Santtu Luopajärvi
    Dear Frank Sands,

    I do realize that various circumstances prevent us from "doing the right thing" on more than one occasion.

    This, however, does not change the reality that the current way of life prevalent in industrialized nations is not easily supported in the long term. Therefore people ought to realize that while they may not have a choice at the moment, they should endeavour to make that choice a possibility later, and work towards finding alternative solutions. This might be as simple as trying to vote those who seem to be on the side of better public transportation (this, of course, has the complication that some might use it to garner votes, but that's democracy for you).

    There is little point in feeling guilty about having two cars, but some effort should be made to find alternatives. Perhaps getting rid of this "one house per family" mentality would be a good start.
  • Santtu Luopajärvi
    Indeed, overt meat consumption is a serious problem. There isn't just the question of inefficiency in producing meat (one kilogram of beef requires about fifteen kilograms of food and water); there is the logistical infrastructure required to grow the fodder and transporting it to maintain as well.

    Another absurdity is the current trend to own personal automobiles, sometimes two per family. Convenient and nice, true, but hardly something we can afford. It is also rather frustrating when people talk about the ecology of buying a new, fuel-efficient, low-emission car, and seem to forget the amount of resources consumed (and the energy and resources consumed to produce the said resources...) and pollution produced in building the car in the first place.

    This party can't go on for long.
  • benbai
    I completely agree!

    Take a look at this quote:

    "The gist of Stehfest's presentation was that an area the size of Russia and Canada combined could be freed from use as pasture or cropland used to grow animal feed, if people switched from current levels of meat consumption common in Europe and the United States to a diet based on plant-based protein."

    http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/03/vegetar...
  • Itss not an either/or question, it both - if there were only a billion people on the planet, we could each use as much water, energy, materials as we like! But since there are 6 billion people who are all entitled to meet their needs (and wants) then yes, we also need to address consumption/share.
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