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Johann Hari: Are there just too many people in the world?

Thursday, 15 May 2008

This is a column I don't want to write. Its subject is ugly; it makes me instinctively recoil. I have chastised people who bring it up at environmentalist meetings. The people who talk about it obsessively have often been callous about human life, and consistently proved wrong throughout history. And yet... there is a grain of insight in what they say.

The subject is overpopulation. Is our planet over-stuffed with human beings? Are we breeding to excess? These questions are increasingly poking into public debate, and from odd directions. Phillip Mountbatten – husband of the British monarch Elizabeth Windsor – said in a documentary screened this week: "The food prices are going up, and everyone thinks it's to do with not enough food, but it's really [that there are] too many people. It's a little embarrassing for everybody, nobody knows how to handle it." He is not alone. A strange range of people have voiced the same sentiments over the past few months, from the Dalai Lama to Hu Jintao, from Conservative mayor Boris Johnson to Democratic Governor Bill Richardson.

They start by listing the sums, which are indeed startling. Every year, world population grows by 75 million people – equivalent to another Britain and Ireland whooshing fully-populated from the oceans. At the turn of the 18th century, there were 600 million people on earth. At the turn of this century, there were 6.6 billion. By the time I am in my sixties, there will be more than nine billion – at which point there will be more people alive simultaneously than in the first 17 centuries after Christ combined.

The overpopulation lobby say this will inevitably leave more and more people chasing after a diminishing amount of resources on an ecologically-ravaged planet. At their most pessimistic, they say human beings will, in the long sweep of planetary history, look like a big-brained version of a locust cloud. They eat everything in sight and multiply fifty-fold – until they have consumed everything, when they turn in desperation on each other, munch off their siblings' heads, and then fall out of the sky dead.

They say with a frown that this global swarming is driving global warming. How can you be prepared to cut back on your car emissions and your plane emissions but not on your baby emissions? Can you really celebrate the pitter-patter of tiny carbon-footprints?

Yet this subject seems to leech out all the dark toxins of environmentalism – a movement I believe is the most urgent and important in the world. There has always been an element of green thinking that viewed humans as a parasitic infestation, wrecking the Eden of planet earth. The philosopher John Gray calls our species "homo rapiens". The founder of Earth First!, Dave Foreman, called us "Humanpox" and wrote: "The Aids epidemic, rather than being a scourge, is a welcome development in the inevitable reduction of human population... If [it] didn't exist, radical environmentalists would have to invent [it]."

If environmentalism sounds – or is – misanthropic, we will lose the argument. Most human beings will never think the world would be better off without us. Nobody thinks they are the surplus human being who should not have been born. These strident arguments hand a huge gift to the anti-greens, who always said we were anti-human beneath the surface.

It also looks like displacement. The places where population is growing fastest – sub-Saharan Africa, rural China and Bangladesh – have virtually no carbon emissions, and pitiful food consumption rates. The gap is so huge that to be responsible for as many gas emissions as one British person, a Cambodian woman would need to have 262 children. Can we really sit in our nice homes, with a fridge-full of food we will mostly chuck away and an SUV in the drive, and complain that she is the problem?

Once this gut-reaction has kicked in, I then think of the horrible history of overpopulation predictions. Most famously, the 18th century demographer Thomas Malthus said mass starvation was inevitable because population increases geometrically while food production grows arithmetically. He didn't anticipate the coming of the Industrial Revolution. His successors in the 1960s, like Paul Ehrich and the Club of Rome, similarly didn't see the Green Revolution that was galloping around the corner of history.

So it is tempting to say now that the overpopulation argument will smack into some new technological development. It's not quite true to say there is a diminishing amount of resources, because the genius of human beings is to find new ways to use what is there. Two centuries ago, nobody could have conceived that the sun's rays or the waves in the ocean were a resource to be used – but solar and tidal power make it so.

And yet, and yet ... why do my own arguments leave me echoing with doubt? A dark voice in my head says: you would accept that, to pluck an absurd number, 100 billion people would be too many. You don't think human genius is infinitely expansive; there is a limit to what it can solve. So isn't the question just where you draw the line? If 100 billion is too much, why not nine billion?

Hmm. You should always take on the best arguments of your opponents, not the worst. There are good people – a world away from the British royals or the human-hating fringes – who are sincerely concerned about population levels: people like Professors Chris Rapley and John Guillebaud. They argue that although the swelling billions are not now emitting large amounts of greenhouse gases, they will see that we are doing it and will (totally understandably) want to join in the carbon bonfire.

But if this is a problem, is there a solution that isn't abhorrent? Some people seem to reach instinctively for authoritarian answers. The government of China has bragged that its "greatest contribution" to the fight against global warming has been its policy of punishing, imprisoning or sterilising women who have more than one child. Some environmentalists – a small minority – eye this idea jealously.

There is a far better way – and it is something we should be pursuing anyway. It is called feminism. Where women have control over their own bodies – through contraception, abortion and general independence – they choose not to be perpetually pregnant. The UN Fund For Population Activities has calculated that 350 million women in the poorest countries didn't want their last child, but didn't have the means to prevent it. We should be helping them by building a global anti-Vatican, distributing the pill and the words of Mary Wollstonecraft.

So after studying the evidence, I am left in a position I didn't expect. Yes, the argument about overpopulation is distasteful, often discussed inappropriately, and far from being a panacea-solution – but it can't be dismissed entirely. It will be easier for 6 billion people to cope on a heaving, boiling planet than for nine or 10 billion – and we will only get there by freeing women to make their own reproductive choices. To achieve this green goal, it's necessary to mix some oestrogen into the environmentalist palette.

j.hari@independent.co.uk

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Comments

109 Comments

"possibly support a population of 60 billion people. This ignores the realities of modern economics, land crowding, political instability and over consumption in developed economies. "

I did not argue that the World could possibly support a population of 60 billion. I stated that a population of that size could be supported with 1970's technology. That is, this is a low estimate of what could be supported today. There is no evidence that physical factors have changed sufficiently to influence the estimate.

This author fails to distinguish between social factors (modern economics, political instability) and physical factors (land crowding), thus making it impossible to identify the actual source of the problem. This is the kind of confused thinking that makes any solution to the problem impossible.

High prices are directly traceable to neo-liberal economics, speculation, and intellectual property laws. Any physical limit is an order of magnitude away (a factor of ten).

Posted by David Stodolsky | 21.05.08, 13:48 GMT

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Worldwide increase in population is caused by world wide increase in food production. Nothing else is really a significant factor.

Although I support women's reproductive rights I think overall it would have very little impact on the world wide population increase rate.

I also don't think the subject matter is necessarily distasteful. It is only seen that way because talking about it implies that their needs to be an aggressive solution to it.

In reality we are a biological species in a biological world and the rules of nature apply to us as much as any other. To keep the population at the level it is now we have stop the level of food production increasing every year.

Posted by Lena | 20.05.08, 21:51 GMT

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I have an short essay entitled:

'A 10,000-year misunderstanding'

published in Australia by ScienceAlert earlier in May that should help you come to terms with just 'how long' there have been "too many people in the world".

More evidence on request by return email.

Posted by Peter Salonius | 20.05.08, 19:11 GMT

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In response to David Stodolsky's comments-
You speak very pertinently of our shortage hysteria, and quote that our world's combined agricultural resources could possibly support a population of 60 billion people. This ignores the realities of modern economics, land crowding, political instability and over consumption in developed economies.
The reality of the situation is that with world demand for food consistently growing prices will rise, until they reach a level where an even larger proportion of the world population will face starvation- recent food riots are early evidence of a problem which will only worsen. I see the situation having two long term solutions; we need to use our resources more efficiently i.e. stop throwing away £10 bn worth of food a year in the uk, buying consumerist rubbish we don’t require etc etc. We don’t need to all become tree huggers in the process but simply act with somewhat more of a social conscience and long term vision.Secondly, through the UN and world governments, we should ensure a threshold of stock food production is upheld, a part of current problems is with the supply of food, farmers are opting to grow more lucrative crops for use in bio-fuels as opposed to basic stuffs such as wheat and maize. Finally, Mr. Stodolsky speaks of the ‘destruction of democracy’; surely a democracies aim is to defend the human rights of its people, I don’t believe mass famine is a human pre-requisite.


Posted by Max Centrist | 20.05.08, 13:56 GMT

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You propose an interesting approach to a difficult problem but it is unfortunately only at best a start (and at worst no solution at all). While it may be helpful for 350 million women to have the means to prevent their last child, if they're happy to have their first 6 or 8 or 10 children, then we still have a problem. It seems to me that, given human proclivities, some form of regulation will ultimately be necessary.

Posted by Greg Kopia | 20.05.08, 13:32 GMT

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Angisan - there is another way: forced sterilisation for anyone who has had children. So people CAN be forced not to breed. The ration should be: One child each. More than that, you pay. Fascistic? Extreme? So was world war two - sometimes it's necessary to suspend democracy and go against human rights. The problem is extreme too so needs radical action. Will it happen? No. We'll just get more and more overpopulated and the world will be turned into a hell-hole. Thankfully, I won't be here. Children alive today will.

Posted by Eddie | 20.05.08, 11:40 GMT

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Eddie, I do live in the real world and if you look at what I said it was that men and women must share responsibility. I agree totally that women must protect themselves but men also have a reponsibility not to father children they don't want.

I don't think for one moment that the spread of AIDs is purely down to men. It is down, in the main, to ignorance and even indifference by both sexes. But women cannot wear condoms, which are proven to give protection.

People cannot be forced not to 'breed', as you so elegantly put it. Even in China people still have more than one child and that child, more often than not, ends up in an orphanage and still has to be fed and still has a carbon footprint.

Believing that men should wear condoms when engaging in casual sex does not make me a manhater.

I agree that I might be being idealistic in believing that education is the only way to tackle the issue of population, but I really can not see another way.

Posted by Anginsan | 20.05.08, 11:06 GMT

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Has the Independent gone fascist?

According to "Resources available to agriculture" in Sci. Amer. in the 1970's, technology of that day could support 60 billion people. I have seen more recent estimates of 120 billion. Current UN estimate is that population will stabilize at 9 billion.

This article is just a contribution to the current "shortage hysteria" that is being used to promote militarism and the destruction of democracy.

Posted by David Stodolsky | 20.05.08, 09:48 GMT

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According to www.dieoff.org we'd only be able to support 2 billion without fossil fuels. Check out the book, "Eating Fossil Fuels".

Posted by Bandidoz | 19.05.08, 21:53 GMT

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Angisan - here's an idea: live in the real world eh? It is a person's responsibilty what goes into their body. It is up to women to protect themselves as grownups do. Anyway, condoms do decrease sexual pleasure (how do you know it's an 'excuse' without having a penis eh?) - and the spread of AIDS is no more men's fault than women's. You seem to be one of them manhating feminazis... it's always men's fault and women are always innocent... yeah right!

Anyway, nothing like this will work - it's all too nice. People need to be forced to have fewer children, not asked, when there is so much pressure (from family, religion, economics, instincts) to breed.

Posted by Eddie | 19.05.08, 20:19 GMT

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