Non-Profit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information
The Original Voice of the American Academy of Anti-Aging, Preventative, and Regenerative Medicine
logo logo
Home » Demographics

World population to reach 7 BILLION

By dsorbello at Aug. 13, 2014, 2:26 p.m., 29491 hits

Room for one more? World population to reach 7 BILLION in next few days

Children most likely to be born in Asia-Pacific region
Fears over pressure on food supply and medical care

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 4:43 PM on 16th October 2011

The world's population looks set to smash through the seven billion barrier in the next few days, according to the United Nations.

It comes just 12 years since the total reached six billion - with official estimates saying the figure will top eight billion in 2025 and 10 billion before the end of the century.

And it is most likely the baby will be born in the Asia-Pacific region - where the population growth rate is higher than anywhere else in the world.


Experts say the pace of growth - which has seen the number of people on the planet triple since 1940 - poses an increasing danger to citizens.

With more people to feed, house and provide medical care for, they say the world's resources look set to come under more strain than ever before.

As populations stabilise in the industrial world, almost all growth in the near future is expected to take place in developing countries.

Of the 2.3 billion people the UN believes will be added by 2050, more than one billion will live in sub-Saharan Africa. The Indian subcontinent will add some 630 million people.

It will mean less land and water available for each person. Poorer people, who tend to depend more on natural resources, will bear the brunt as they will not be able to compete with the rich.

The major issues will be how to feed the new arrivals, which will see the need for new varieties of improved crops.

Ageing populations are also set to pose a problem with some industrial countries, such as Japan, nearly doubling its share of the population aged 65 and over in the past 20 years.

This will put increased pressure on pension and healthcare systems.

The report states: ‘Another two billion people may be added to the world population by mid-century, many of them in places where hunger, poverty, and environmental degradation are already taking a high toll.

’Supporting the world’s human population will mean eliminating poverty, transitioning to an economy that is in sync with the earth, and securing every person’s health, education, and reproductive choice.

'If we do not voluntarily stabilize population, we risk a much less humane end to growth as the ongoing destruction of the earth’s natural systems catches up with us.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2049451/World-population-reach-7-BILLION-days.html#ixzz1btEh143Y



— Last Edited by Greentea at 2011-10-26 08:23:06 —

 
Posts [ 1 ] | Last post Aug. 13, 2014, 2:26 p.m.
#1 - Aug. 13, 2014, 2:26 p.m.
HTD

Not all research points to a rising population as necessarily becoming only problematic. Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee suggest that added population could be beneficial in their book “The Second Machine Age: Work Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies”. This view is also reflected in H. Eric Drexler's “Radical Abundance: How a Revolution in Nanotechnology will change Civilization”.
Quoting from Brynjolfsson: “It is a remarkable and unmistakable fact that, with the exception of climate change, virtually all environmental, social, and individual indicators of health have improved over time, even as human population has increased. This improvement is not a lucky coincidence; it is cause and effect. Things have gotten better because there are more people, who in total have more good ideas that improve our overall lot.”
Therefore, unprecedented innovations and recombinations of existing technologies, occurring by the hour and day, require counter-intuitive consideration before intuitive Doomsday scenarios be accepted as the only or most probable route for future standards of living and development of human institutions.