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Global population growth is now slowing rapidly. Will a falling population be better for the environment?

Public Policy / analysis
Global population growth is now slowing rapidly. Will a falling population be better for the environment?
green
Nature moved in when people left the fishing village of Houtouwan in Zhejiang, China. Joe Nafis/Shutterstock.

By Andrew Taylor & Supriya Mathew*

Right now, human population growth is doing something long thought impossible – it’s wavering. It’s now possible global population could peak much earlier than expected, topping 10 billion in the 2060s. Then, it would begin to fall.

In wealthier countries, it’s already happening. Japan’s population is falling sharply, with a net loss of 100 people every hour. In Europe, America and East Asia, fertility rates have fallen sharply. Many middle or lower income countries are about to drop too.

This is an extraordinary change. It was only ten years ago demographers were forecasting our numbers could reach as high as 12.3 billion, up from around 8 billion today.

For 50 years, some environmentalists have tried to save the environment by cutting global population growth. In 1968, The Population Bomb forecast massive famines and called for large-scale birth control.

Now we face a very different reality – population growth is slowing without population control, and wealthy country populations are falling, triggering frantic but largely ineffective efforts to encourage more children. What might a falling global population mean for the environment?

Depopulation is already happening

For much of Europe, North America, and some of Northern Asia, depopulation has been underway for decades. Fertility rates have fallen steadily over the past 70 years and have stayed low, while longer life expectancies mean numbers of very old people (over 80) will double in these regions within 25 years.

China was until recently the world’s most populous nation, accounting for a sixth of the global population. But China, too, is now declining, with the fall expected to rapidly accelerate.

By the end of the century, China is projected to have two-thirds fewer people than today’s 1.4 billion. The sudden drop is due to the long tail of the One Child Policy, which ended in 2016, too late to avert the fall. Japan was once the world’s 11th most populated country, but is expected to halve before the end of the century.

shibuya crossing
For now, Tokyo’s Shibuya Crossing is one of the busiest in the world. But depopulation is beginning to hit Japan hard. Takashi Images/Shutterstock.

What’s going on is known as demographic transition. As countries move from being largely rural and agrarian to industrial and service-based economies, fertility drops sharply. When low birth rates and low death rates combine, populations begin to fall.

Why? A major factor is choice for women. Women are increasingly having children later in life and having fewer children on average, due to improved choices and freedoms in relation to education and careers.

Why are we suddenly focused on depopulation, given birth rates in rich countries have been falling for decades? When the COVID pandemic hit in 2020, birth rates went into free fall for most countries before recovering a little, while death rates increased. That combination bought forward the onset of population decline more broadly.

A falling population poses real challenges economically. There are fewer workers available and more very old people needing support.

Countries in rapid decline may start to limit emigration to make sure they keep scarce workers at home and prevent further ageing and decline. The competition for skilled workers will intensify globally. Of course, migration doesn’t change how many people there are – just where they are located.

Are these just rich country problems? No. Population growth in Brazil, a large middle-income country, is now the slowest on record.

By 2100, the world is expected to have just six countries where births outweigh deaths – Samoa, Somalia, Tonga, Niger, Chad, and Tajikistan. The other 97% of nations are projected to have fertility rates below replacement levels (2.1 children per woman).

Bad for the economy – good for the environment?

Fewer of us means a reprieve for nature – right? No. It’s not that simple.

For instance, the per capita amount of energy we use peaks between ages 35 and 55, falls, and then rises again from age 70 onwards, as older people are more likely to stay indoors longer and live alone in larger homes. This century’s extraordinary growth in older populations could offset declines from falling populations.

Then there’s the huge disparity in resource use. If you live in the United States or Australia, your carbon footprint is nearly double that of a counterpart in China, the largest overall emitter.

Richer countries consume more. So as more countries get wealthier and healthier but with fewer children, it’s likely more of the global population will become higher emitters. Unless, of course, we decouple economic growth from more emissions and other environmental costs, as many countries are attempting – but very slowly.

Expect to see more liberal migration policies to boost the numbers of working-aged people. We’re already seeing this – migration has now passed projections for 2050.

When people migrate to a developed country, it can be economically advantageous to them and the adopted country. Environmentally, it can increase per capita emissions and environmental impact, given the link between income and emissions is very clear.

line at airport
As populations fall, countries will compete for skilled migrants. PeopleImages.com - Yuri A/Shutterstock.

Then there’s the looming upheaval of climate change. As the world heats up, forced migration – where people have to leave home to escape drought, war or other climate-influenced disaster – is projected to soar to 216 million people within a quarter century. Forced migration may change emissions patterns, depending on where people find sanctuary.

These factors aside, it’s possible a falling global population could cut overall consumption and reduce pressure on the natural environment.

Environmentalists worried about overpopulation have long hoped for global population to fall. They may soon get their wish. Not through enforced birth control policies but largely through the choices of educated, wealthier women opting for smaller families.

It’s very much an open question whether falling populations will reduce pressure on the natural world. Unless we also cut emissions and change consumption patterns in developed countries, this is by no means guaranteed.The Conversation


*Andrew Taylor, Associate Professor in Demography, Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University and Supriya Mathew, Postdoctoral researcher in climate change and health, Charles Darwin University.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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18 Comments

Spot on.

Mother Nature sees only consumption. But in reality, consumption is per head. And the more we want to consume per head, the less of us there can be. We coasted along on stockpile draw-down (minerals, soil, fossil energy, bio-capacity) but that was a temporary overshoot.

Only by truncating our appraisal of time, can we think we're on the up-and-up. Seems a lot of folk do this; particularly those who have a vested interest in the narrative. Trouble is, their approach makes things worse, in even the medium term. 

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Would you have any solid links to global soil health by chance? Something I've been pondering for a while now.

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The first global soil census shows most topsoil is thinning (anthropocenemagazine.org)

That's just physical loss - nutrient loss is a whole different ball-game; made more a roulette because of Haber-Bosch. It is fossil-energised - take that away and half the human population goes too. With ramifications good and bad - less to feed, more depletion of in-soil nutrient (ex ammonia). 

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I'm sure someone clever and more motivated than I am, can make some projections for when the human race will go extinct? It'll be a long tail I expect.

To amuse myself I looked up the birth rate and its current trajectory. On average over the past 5 years, the birth rate has declined around 1.05% per year. Putting this into Copilot using an exponential decay formula it will take approximately 271 years for the birth rate to decrease to 1 birth per 1000 people, all things being equal.

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I'm sure someone clever and more motivated than I am, can make some projections for when the human race will go extinct? It'll be a long tail I expect.

I'll try digging out the source, but at the current rate, about 1,000 years.

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Very interesting subject. Are we close to the peak of humanity and the decline sets in? In my opinion, yes.

Will we reach an equilibrium and civilization continues is the real question.

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Bring the population decline on. There will be a lot of thrashing about by economic ideologues, political pronatalists, business moguls and media they own, as their dream of humanity living in rented shoe boxes, crammed with disposible consumer items evapourates.

Thing is, this collapse in birth rate isn't just about the usual narrative of "womens empowerment", it's as much the poisoning of our collective reproductive systems with the toxic legacy of of our technological ingenuity, along with the dispair many feel about the aboslute destruction of our planets biosphere by out of control industrialists. Not to forget the debt servitude to a financial system that sucks the libedo out of any starry eyed newly-wed. 

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Fun fact: the birth rate was higher during the great depression.

Actually it's been higher over many periods much worse than this.

Most of the change is down to effective and accessible contraceptives.

Joke's on both the left and right wings, neither approach is viable with a declining population.

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The greatest predictor of womens fertility historically is child mortallity.

Growthist economics isn't possible with declining population. In saying that, there's billions of impoverished people with very few physical possessions.

 The only way to keep growth going, is by importing more consumers, which is something virtually every first world country is attempting. Without human imports, all those growthy issues politicians and media hand wring about would be a thing of the past. Energy, plenty, water plenty, sewerage and tampons on beaches solved, need to intensify farming? No. Transgenics? Waste of time. Infrastructure? Maintenance only needed. I could go on, but thats enough to get the picture. 

Growthism will stop, either voluntarily, or naturally enforced by human created depletion, war, waste, or pathogenic issues.

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Many friends I talk with have decided to never have children, or have stopped at one saying it’s too expensive to have another. 

One thing this article does not mention, the impact of an inverted population pyramid on elder care. If there are too many elder people, who’s going to care?

In the last 40-60 years the population tripled. In the next 40 it’s projected to go up 25%. If you’re making long term bets, financial or not, this should be one of the first considerations.

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We stopped at two, and made that call after much thought, nearly 40 years ago. There is, however, a counter-argument that the smarter folk are the ones abstain, thus the population becomes lesser-of-intellect. That has ramifications for the likes of democracy. 

The inversion has to gone through, by a population as overshot as ours. The rule is easy; the earlier the better. 

 

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Yep, those whose motivations extend to a feed, a fight, and a f... will increasingly out number all others.  Seems we are well on the way.

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What a confused take.  He doesn't clearly sort out the per capital impacts which are going to happen anyway from the total emissions benefits.  It makes it sound like these points are arguments against lower birth rates:

For instance, the per capita amount of energy we use peaks between ages 35 and 55, falls, and then rises again from age 70 onwards, as older people are more likely to stay indoors longer and live alone in larger homes. This century’s extraordinary growth in older populations could offset declines from falling populations.

That doesn't mean that population decline due to lower birth rates isn't good for the environment.  Regardless of whether the babies are born those in the 30-55 bracket are going to move into the >70 bracket.  Less children will absolutely reduce the total emissions (maybe not per capita rates.) 

Richer countries consume more. So as more countries get wealthier and healthier but with fewer children, it’s likely more of the global population will become higher emitters.

Again, regardless of births this is only a per capital increase.

 

Then the migration arguments are maybes.  I get it, could go either way still.  But pop decrease will help 

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"energy use rises again from age 70 onwards, as older people are more likely to stay indoors longer and live alone in larger homes."

More likely under a blanket with a hot water bottle, than switching on 25kw of electric heating in their "larger homes". Energy embedded in consumption of consumer goods and services virtually falls to zero for most over 70s. 

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Posted this before but Tom Murphy has been questioning UN population projections. His simple modelling suggests we might peak as early as 2040

https://youtu.be/4-G70C90aas

 

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"When the COVID pandemic hit in 2020, birth rates went into free fall for most countries before recovering a little, while death rates increased."

Death rates are still highly elevated in most Western countries, even though covid is not a factor any more. NZ is no exception:

https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-mortality-p-scores-average-ba…

Why is this?

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https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-mortality-p-scores-average-baseline-by-age?country=~NZL

Baby boomers starting to die off?

Obesity epidemic finally hitting home?

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Given our inability to take any significant action to preserve our habitat, the natural decline in birth rates is incredibly fortunate.

Imagine a stable population of around 500 million human beings. Still an extraordinary amount of people allowing tremendous diversity, but achieving balance with nature would be a far more achievable exercise.

There needs to be some very serious conversations around reducing the cost of care for the elderly. Currently there is massive profit extraction from elder care and medicine, which will become unaffordable. This is a choice. Outside of the actual people doing the caring, elderly don't actually require that much resource to look after. 

Another thought is do we need to be dragging our lives out for as long as possible regardless of quality? There may need to be some tough but pragmatic decisions around quality vs quantity.

 

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