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World Today, World Tomorrow |
Surekha Roy |
There is a view that the burgeoning population is a vast human
resource which can be used for development but a substantial
difference has occurred in this conception, as unchecked growth
of population is more of a liability than an asset. In earlier
years, prior to Industrial Revolution, population was not a
problem. But with the passing years, the earth is marching
towards a saturation point. Population growth which exceeds the
carrying capacity of an area or environment results in
overpopulation. Over population is determined by the density and
the ratio of population to available sustainable resources.
The world population is the total number of living humans on
Earth at a given time. As of July 1, 2008, the world’s
population is believed to be 6,707,035,007. The CIA World Fact
Book reports that India has a population of approximately
1,135,062,000 people according to a July 2008 estimate. It’s
already the world’s second-most-populated country next to China.
The percentage growth in the population during a decade is
calculated on the basis of the decadal census. The change in
population is a natural process which is the result of differing
birth and death rates as well as migration. India’s decadal
population growth rate, at present, stands at 21.3%. This high
growth can be ascribed if the death rates being lower then the
birth rates. Experiences from around the world and within India
have shown that birth rates fall when a society is economically
well-off, women are empowered and general education and
awareness levels are high. In the last few centuries, the number
of people living on Earth has increased many times over. By the
year 2000, there were 10 times as many people on Earth as there
were 300 years ago. According to data from the World Factbook
2005–2006, the world human population increases by 203,800 every
day. The world’s population, on its current growth trajectory,
is expected to reach nearly 9 billion by the year 2042. Between
1959 and 2000, the world’s population increased from 2.5 billion
to 6.1 billion people. According to United Nations projections,
the world population will be between 7.9 billion and 10.9
billion by 2050.
The population growth is not occurring uniformly. If the
countries are divided one has precisely two groups those with
rapid growth rates and those with relatively slow growth rates.
The first group making about two-third of the world population
are mostly the Under Developed Countries. Most Latin American,
African and Asian countries fall into this category. The second
group is the Developed Countries which are United States,
Canada, and most European Countries, Israel, Russia, Japan,
Australia etc. India falls in the category of developing
countries.
Population in India has been on the increase over the last 50
years and now stands around 1 billion with an overall population
density of nearly 290 per sq.km. Densely populated areas,
however, have population density of more than 700 per sq km with
some urban areas displaying a density of 6500 per sq.km and
more. Some major areas of concern are –almost half the
population is below the poverty line with 40% of the urban
population living in slums. Yet, there is hardly any time-bound
program to stabilize the population.
World Population is currently growing by approximately 75
million people per year. Net growth by mid-century is predicted
by the United Nations’ medium variant to be about 33 million per
year. Almost all growth will take place in the less developed
regions, where today’s 5.3 billion population of underdeveloped
countries is expected to increase to 7.9 billion in 2050. In
contrast, the population of the more developed regions will
remain mostly unchanged, at 1.2 billion. The world’s population
is expected to rise by 40% to 9.1 billion.
During 2005-2050, nine countries are expected to account for
half of the world’s projected population increase: India,
Pakistan, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Bangladesh,
Uganda, United States of America, Ethiopia, and China listed
according to the size of their contribution to population
growth. Some argue that the Earth may support six billion
people, but only on the condition that many live in misery.
Overpopulation has had a major impact on the environment of
Earth starting at least as early as the 20th century. Human
population has expanded with resultant adverse impacts upon
bio-diversity, climate change, and even human health. There are
also indirect economic consequences of this environmental
degradation in the form of ecosystem services which includes
inadequate fresh water for drinking, sewage treatment, and
effluent discharge. Rise in population is also responsible for
increased levels of air pollution, water pollution, soil
contamination, and noise pollution.
Population explosion is also responsible for deforestation and
loss of ecosystems that sustain global atmospheric oxygen and
carbon dioxide balance, and for this about eight million
hectares of forest are lost each year. Carbon dioxide and other
air pollutants collect in the atmosphere like a thickened
blanket, trapping the sun’s heat and causing the planet to warm
up. The increase in global temperatures has been brought about
by the increased emission of greenhouse gases, into the
atmosphere. There is no doubt that atmospheric carbondioxide has
risen since the 1950s along with the rise in world population.
The human population explosion is becoming the greatest threat
for the whole species of human genre resulting in hazardous
conditions of lifestyle including overcrowded living conditions,
malnutrition and inadequate, inaccessible health care.
Population-reduction programs and current trends toward world
population stabilization by 2050 are, by themselves, sources of
assurance of a good future for the future generations. However,
much too little is being proposed for much-needed government
action plans with regard to the empowerment of women, free and
immediate access to safe means of birth control, adequate family
planning and health education programs as well as other vital
interventions. The only way-out is to take on hand an elaborate
program of mass education campaign especially in rural areas,
directed to the goal of convincing people of urgent needs of
family planning. The Government, must therefore, necessitate
steps to control population before it exceeds the carrying
capacity of our Planet, the Earth.
*Freelance Journalist
Disclaimer: The views expressed by the author in this feature
are entirely her own and do not necessarily reflect the views of
PIB.
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