The Next 2 Billion: Can the World Support 10 Billion People?

IF 4.6 2区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
David Lam
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The UN projects that world population will peak at 10.3 billion in 2084, a 2.1 billion increase from 2024. Can the world provide food, water, and other resources to 10.3 billion people? How will additional population exacerbate resource challenges and worsen climate change? This paper analyzes these questions by looking at the last 60 years and by simulating the future impact of population growth and rising incomes on food, water, energy, and CO2 emissions. Looking back, food production has increased faster than the population in all regions, and we have not experienced significant shortages in nonrenewable resources. The history of water and CO2 emissions is less encouraging, however, with declining water levels in many aquifers and global warming threatening to undermine progress in all areas. Looking forward, population growth will be concentrated in poor countries, while rich countries, with higher consumption levels and emissions, will experience population decline. Population growth is projected to significantly increase demand for food and water in coming decades but is projected to have only modest impacts on energy and CO2, with population decline in high‐emission higher income countries more than offsetting the impact of population growth in low‐emission lower‐income countries.
下一个 20 亿:世界能否养活 100 亿人?
联合国预测,世界人口将在 2084 年达到峰值 103 亿,比 2024 年增加 21 亿。世界能否为 103 亿人提供食物、水和其他资源?新增人口将如何加剧资源挑战和气候变化?本文通过回顾过去 60 年,并模拟人口增长和收入增加对粮食、水、能源和二氧化碳排放的未来影响,对这些问题进行了分析。回顾过去,在所有地区,粮食产量的增长速度都快于人口的增长速度,而且我们没有经历过不可再生资源的严重短缺。然而,水和二氧化碳排放的历史却不那么令人鼓舞,许多含水层的水位不断下降,全球变暖有可能破坏所有领域的进展。展望未来,人口增长将集中在贫穷国家,而消费水平和排放量较高的富裕国家将出现人口下降。预计未来几十年人口增长将大幅增加对粮食和水的需求,但对能源和二氧化碳的影响不大,高排放的高收入国家的人口减少将抵消低排放的低收入国家人口增长的影响有余。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
60
期刊介绍: Population and Development Review is essential reading to keep abreast of population studies, research on the interrelationships between population and socioeconomic change, and related thinking on public policy. Its interests span both developed and developing countries, theoretical advances as well as empirical analyses and case studies, a broad range of disciplinary approaches, and concern with historical as well as present-day problems.
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