Angst about declining global fertility and population is palpable and building. While certain high-fertility hotspots in developing countries will help to fuel a surge in the global population for many decades to come—reaching an estimated 10.4 billion people by 2100—humanity is at an inflection point where population decline is a lived experience and possibly irreversible in many parts of the world.
Today’s drop in fertility rates was predictable and predicted for decades. The worst thing about its arrival now is that it’s so late in coming.
If governments had accepted shrinking demographics decades ago and adopted policies to encourage smaller families instead of fighting it by trying to prop up fertility rates, not only would the global population be lower today, there would be less greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, so the climate crisis would be less dire.
The global population still increases by between 81 to 85 million annually, a pace undiminished for 50 years (although it is a smaller percentage change on a much bigger total population). It requires housing, employing, and servicing the equivalent of a whole new Germany, four Sao Paulos, two Tokyos, or ten New York Cities every year, drawing on resources that are already overallocated.
The other critical connection to make is between population growth and GHG emissions. The two have a direct relationship, so lowering fertility rates would have also lowered global emissions. According to the IAMECON paper, if strategies to lower fertility rates were more widely implemented 50 years ago, it would have made a significant difference to the climate today. Today’s children would face less risk and a more positive, more equitable future.
Those conversations need to reverberate around the world and reach the highest levels of government. Governments worldwide must adjust outdated thinking about growth for growth’s sake and gear policy toward lower fertility rates and a sustainable population.
On a planet with finite resources, progress on any environmental or social problem will be ephemeral at best until we curb our numbers, our consumption-based behaviors, and our pollution-generating activities. We can’t drain the atmospheric bathtub of greenhouse gases with the faucets on full blast. But by confronting the clear relationship between fertility rates and climate change, and adjusting our policies accordingly, we can at least turn the taps off.
This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Phoebe Barnard and Carter Dillard.
Phoebe Barnard and Carter Dillard | Radio Free (2023-06-02T05:51:02+00:00) To Restore Nature, We Must Invest More in Our Children. Retrieved from https://www.radiofree.org/2023/06/02/to-restore-nature-we-must-invest-more-in-our-children/
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