Subject: Population outrunning the earth's carrying capacity
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* Subject: KZPG-Back/Inter: The Earth's Carrying Capacity
* Date: Fri, 13 Oct 1995 08:00:17 -0700 (PDT)
From: Clyde Dilley
WORLDWATCH INSTITUTE
by Lester R. Brown and Hall Kane
POPULATION OUTRUNNING THE EARTH'S CARRYING CAPACITY
Over the next 40 years, the world will face massive grain deficits in
Africa, the Indian subcontinent, and China if populations grow as
projected, the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based
environmental research institute, said in a study released today.
[KZPG note: I've been hearing ads for investors in the grain market on
the radio saying there was a potential for huge profits due to
preducted future grain shortages.]
---
The new book, "Full House: Reassessing the Earth's Population Carrying
Capacity," by Lester R. Brown and Hal Kane, shows that the projected
import deficits will dwarf exportable supplies, setting up fierce
competition among importing countries and driving up world grain prices.
The authors present data showing that the world is moving into a new era.
They observe that "From mid-century until recently, projected increases in
the world fish catch and grain output were simple extrapolations of past
trends. The past was a reliable guide to the future. But in a world of
limits, this is changing."
This study, funded by the Wallace Genetic Foundation, the Turner
Foundation, and the McBride Family Fund, contains the first world food
projections to take into account the recent leveling off in the world fish
catch, the spreading scarcity of irrigation water in major food-producing
regions, the projected heavy loss of cropland to industrialization in
Asia, and the diminishing response of crop varieties to additional
fertilizer use.
These projections are for business as usual. They assume that population
growth will continue on the medium-growth trajectory, producer prices will
remain at the level of the early nineties, and soil erosion will continue.
The authors conclude that "food supply is the most immediate constraint on
the earth's population carrying capacity." They note that "the food
sector is the first where human demands are colliding with some of the
earth's limits: the capacity of oceanic fisheries to supply fish, the
availability of fertile new land to plow, and the ability of the
hydrological cycle to supply irrigation water." The continuously rising
demand for food is also pressing against the capacity of crop varieties to
respond to ever greater applications of fertilizer. As the yield response
of available wheat, rice, and corn varieties to additional fertilizer
diminishes, the rise in grain yield per hectare is slowing in all major
grain-producing regions. With biotechnology neither providing nor
promising any dramatic breakthrough in raising yields, there is little
hope for restoring rapid growth in food output.
"The impact of these collisions will reverberate throughout the economy,"
say the authors. "Many knew that this time would eventually come, but
because no one knew exactly when or how it would happen, the food prospect
was widely debated. Now the constraints that are emerging simultaneously
to slow the growth in food production are clearly visible."
"Full House" compares food and population projections for the next 40
years with the trends of the last 40 years. For example, between 1950 and
1990 the world added 2.8 billion people, an average of 70 million a year.
But between 1990 and 2030, it is projected to add 3.6 billion, or 90
million a year.
For developing countries, the population gains ahead are potentially
overwhelming. Nigeria, which gained 55 million people from 1950 to 1990,
is projected to add 191 million people during the next four decades.
Ethiopia, which can no longer feed itself even when rainfall is good, is
projected to add 106 million people by 2030--more than three times as many
as during the last 40 years. Iran faces increases of a similar magnitude.
Pakistan will add nearly three times as many people in the next four
decades as during the last four. Bangladesh and Egypt will each add
almost twice as many people. The largest absolute increase is slated for
India: 590 million. China is second with 490 million.
Such population growth in a finite ecosystem raises questions about the
earth's carrying capacity: How long can the earth's natural support
systems sustain such growth? How many people can the earth support at a
given level of consumption?
Whereas the seafood catch increased by 78 million tons from 1950 (22
million tons) to 1989 (100 million tons), the authors are not counting on
any growth in the catch from 1990 to 2030. Marine biologists at the Food
and Agriculture Organization report that all 17 of the major oceanic
fisheries are being fished at or beyond capacity. Nine are in a state of
decline.
With grain output, the world added 1.15 billion tons between 1950 and
1990, but with business-as-usual projections, the authors see the world
adding only 369 million tons over the next four decades. To put this in
historical perspective, the annual increase from 1950 to 1984 was 30
million tons. Between 1984 and 1992, it dropped to 12 million tons. And
these projections show it dropping further--to 9 million tons between now
and 2030.
If this production scenario materializes and if population rises to 8.9
billion in 2030 as projected, the grain supply per person for the world as
a whole will drop to 240 kilograms, just 20 percent above the current
consumption level in India of 200 kilograms.
The projected world grain harvest of 2.1 billion tons in 2030 could
satisfy populations of different sizes, depending on consumption levels.
At the U.S. consumption level of 800 kilograms per person per year, a
harvest of 2 billion tons would sustain 2.5 billion people. At the
Italian consumption level of 400 kilograms, it could support 5 billion,
roughly the 1990 world population. And at the Indian level of 200
kilograms, this harvest would support 10 billion people. Although many
people aspire to the U.S. diet, population growth is foreclosing that
option for much of humanity.
Since 1984, grain output per person has fallen roughly 1 percent per year.
Since 1989, the seafood catch per person has fallen by 2 percent per year.
At a time when U.N. estimates show nearly 900 million people are already
hungry, the prospect of further declines in food consumption is not a
pleasant prospect. Even now, the food needs of the 90 million added each
year can be satisfied only by reducing consumption among those already
here.
Brown and Kane say that "With fishers and farmers no longer able to expand
output fast enough to keep up with population growth, it is time to
reassess population policy. New information on the carrying capacity of
both land and oceanic food systems argues for a basic rethinking of
national population policies, an accelerated international response to
fill unmet family planning needs, and a recasting of development
strategies to address the underlying causes of high fertility."
In April 1994, the United Nations Population Fund, the U.N. agency
responsible for population and family planning, put forth a bold proposal
to stabilize world population at 7.8 billion by the year 2050. Among
other things, the plan calls for quadrupling funding for international
family planning assistance programs, pushing the total to $4.4 billion by
2000.
The program is broad-based, involving changes in the role of women and the
expansion of family planning services to include both the 120 million
couples who want to use family planning services but cannot get them and
an additional 230 million couples who would need to plan their families if
population is to stabilize at the 7.8 billion level.
The Fund's World Plan of Action calls for providing universal primary
education for both girls and boys and making secondary education available
to at least half of all girls. If implemented, this program would move
the world onto a low-growth demographic path where population would rise
from today's 5.5 billion to 7.27 billion in 2015 and stabilize at 7.8
billion in 2050.
In addition to the proposed increase in expenditures on family planning
and primary education, Full House includes recommended expenditures on
reforestation, soil conservation, and agricultural and forestry research,
rounding out a global food security budget. Starting at $24 billion in
1996, the total budget increases to nearly $60 billion in the year 2000,
then levels off. The expenditures on agricultural research would entail
an abrupt reversal of the decline underway in the last few years.
With the rise in grain yields now slowing and the yield of oceanic
fisheries and rangelands unlikely to increase much, if at all, there is an
urgent need for national assessments of carrying capacity. Otherwise,
there is a real risk that countries will blindly overrun their ability to
grow food, developing massive deficits that will collectively exceed the
world's exportable supplies.
Simultaneously there is a need for a global assessment of the long-term
food prospect; otherwise, countries facing import deficits will not know
whether there will be enough exports to cover them.
The authors conclude that "food security will replace military security as
the principal preoccupation of national governments in the years ahead.
Despite tight budgets," they say, "the resources are available to reverse
the deteriorating relationship between ourselves and the natural systems
and resources on which we depend. Even though the Cold War is over, the
world is still spending close to $700 billion for military purposes, much
of it designed to deal with threats that have long since disappeared."
Seldom has the world faced an unfolding emergency whose dimensions are as
clear as the growing imbalance between food and people. The new
information on the earth's carrying capacity brings with it a
responsibility to educate and to act that, until recently, did not exist.
A massive global environmental education effort, one in which the
communications media is heavily involved, may be the only way to bring
about the needed transformation in the time available.
--END--
"Full House," published in 1994, is available in paperback for $8.95
($6.95 for 2-4 copies; $5.95 for 5+ copies) or hardcover for $19.95 plus
$3.00 shipping and handling per order from Worldwatch (see below or topic
"Order and Subscription Information" for ordering information).
Worldwatch@igc.apc.org
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