Dire Warnings

In 1967, William and Paul Paddock’s best-selling book Famine 1975! argued that stagnant agricultural productivity and growing populations would mean abandoning countries like Egypt and Haiti to starvation by the middle of the next decade. (1) In 1968, Stanford biologist Paul Ehrlich’s book The Population Bomb—another bestseller—warned that overpopulation would soon lead to starvation and social upheaval on an enormous scale. (2) In all caps on the cover, just under the title, were the words, “WHILE YOU ARE READING THESE WORDS FOUR PEOPLE WILL HAVE DIED OF STARVATION. MOST OF THEM CHILDREN.”

Paul Ehrlich later denied having made any predictions in The Population Bomb, but in the original edition of the book he wrote

The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate.

Ehrlich said we would need drastic population measures—like adding drugs that would sterilize people to their drinking water—to have any hope of avoiding catastrophe. Saving humanity would require preemptive genocide.

These predictions of disaster were wrong. As the human population grew we strained the planet’s resources and did damage to it that will be difficult to repair. But the mass starvation these books predicted never came to pass. Thanks largely to the suite of agricultural innovations known as “the Green Revolution” the world’s food supply grew even faster than its population. Food prices actually fell in the mid-1980s. Today, we produce 30% more calories per person than we did in 1960. Although there were some severe famines—in Ethiopia, Somalia, and North Korea—these had more to do with how food was distributed than with any global food shortage. In some cases countries suffering from famine actually exported food while their population was starving. Modern famines, as the economist Amartya Sen showed, are largely caused by political and economic factors, not a real lack of food supply. (3)

Could we be approaching the limits of the planet to support us now? At the end of the 18th century the economist Thomas Malthus predicted that the human population would inevitably grow past the capacity of the land to support it. Overpopulation would lead to wars, to plagues, and finally to mass starvation:

The power of population is so superior to the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. (4)

The human population has grown sevenfold in the just over 200 years since Malthus wrote. The biologist E.O. Wilson described the rapid growth of the human population in the 20th century as “more bacterial than primate.” (5)

The 1972 book Limits to Growth—a more sober analysis than The Population Bomb or Famine 1975!—projected that if then-current trends didn’t change we’d overshoot the planet’s capacity to support us by the middle of this century. (6) Some scientists have made the case that we’ve already exceeded the “planetary boundaries” that represent the limits of the Earth’s natural systems to endure disruption. (7) The non-profit Global Footprint Network estimates that under current conditions it would take one and a half Earths to produce what we consume and absorb our waste on a sustained basis. We’re certainly overshooting the planet’s limits in the sense that we produce more carbon dioxide than the planet’s ecosystems can absorb. And there’s little question that we have already altered the planet in ways that will have severe and to an extent irreversible consequences.

The Mother of Invention

In general, dire predictions of world food shortages and environmental disasters have underestimated our ability to find ways of increasing agricultural productivity and avoiding ecological problems. Forecasters have predicted catastrophe more or less continually since the days of Thomas Malthus. In 1898, the physicist William Crookes warned that, unless a way were found to synthesize nitrogen fertilizer, developed countries would run out of food in thirty years. By 1913, a pair of German chemists found a way to synthesize nitrogen fertilizer on a large scale. The development of the Haber-Bosch process averted a possible food crisis, just as the Green Revolution would roughly 50 years later.

In 1980, the economist Julian Simon argued in Science that what seem like limits are generally just failures of the imagination. Simon pointed out that when resources become scarce rising commodity prices create strong market incentives to find new ways of producing the things we need. “Because we find new lodes, invent better production methods, and discover new substitutes,” Simon wrote, “the ultimate constraint upon our capacity to enjoy unlimited raw materials at an acceptable price is knowledge.” (8)

Simon challenged those who disagreed with him to name five commodities that would increase in price over the next decade. Paul Ehrlich rose to Simon’s challenge. Ehrlich’s group bet that overconsumption would drive up the prices of chromium, copper, nickel, tin, and tungsten over the next ten years. Ehrlich’s group lost their bet. By the end of the decade every one of the commodities they had named was actually cheaper in real terms.

In another decade, Simon might have lost the bet. Commodity prices certainly haven’t fallen over every ten-year period in recent history. But Simon’s real point was not that commodities prices never go up. Rather it was that societies that reward innovation will generally be able to find substitutes for scarce resources. Even if we run out of some of the resources we rely on today, our overall standard of living will continue to improve. If Simon had bet that quality of life would improve in the 1980s, he would have won that bet too. Even though we are degrading important environmental resources, by most measures global standards of living are steadily improving. (9)

The Earth is probably capable of supporting only about 100 million hunter-gatherers. But today the planet supports more than 70 times that number. Thanks to modern agricultural techniques we have food to spare. Whenever food has threatened to become scarce, we’ve come up with innovative ways to increase food production. In spite of Malthus’ warnings, throughout history agricultural productivity rose roughly in tandem with the density of the human population. Because we are always capable of changing the way we interact with our environment, there’s no clear fixed limit to the number of people the planet can support the way there’s a limit to the number of bacteria that can live in a petri dish. And we certainly aren’t close to the physical limit of the solar energy the Earth receives to support human life. According to one recent estimate, the Earth could—theoretically at least—produce food for more than 280 billion people. (10)

“Our planet’s human-carrying capacity,” as the ecologist Erle Ellis says, “emerges from the capabilities of our social systems and our technologies more than from any environmental limits.” (11) In that sense, the survival of the human race for the foreseeable future is an engineering problem—a difficult engineering problem, but one that with enough time and effort we should be able to solve. Promising technologies that could increase the food supply and reduce our impact on planet’s environment are in development or are already available. Ronald Reagan put it beautifully—if a little too expansively—when he said that “There are no such things as limits to growth, because there are no limits on the human capacity for intelligence, imagination, and wonder.” (12)

Peak Population

Meanwhile, population growth—contrary to Malthus’ expectations—has begun to slow on its own. As countries have industrialized, birth rates have fallen dramatically around the world. According to World Bank estimates, the global fertility rate—roughly, the average number of children women have during their childbearing years—fell from 4.9 in 1960 to just 2.4 in 2011. Given current childhood mortality rates, each woman would have to have on average more than 2.3 children just for the population to remain stable. The United Nations reported in 2012 that the fertility rate has fallen below replacement levels in 75 countries. In Singapore, the fertility rate is just 1.2, which means that every ten potential parents have a total of just six children during their lifetimes. Globally, we may have already reached what Hans Rosling calls “peak child”—the largest generation of children may already have been born. And the fertility rate is still falling.

The world population will continue to grow for some time. That’s because of what’s known as “demographic momentum”: since it takes years for newborn children to reach childbearing age themselves, populations will continue to grow for a while after fertility rates drop below replacement levels. In addition, although fertility rates are declining almost everywhere, they are falling slowly—and in a few cases rising slightly—in parts of tropical Africa. And while the number of new children born may have peaked, people around the world are living longer and longer lives. Right now, the world population is increasing by 80 million—the equivalent of 4 new Beijings—every year. The latest UN report projects the population to grow by to 9.6 billion by 2050.

Of course, those additional people won’t simply be consumers of resources. Humans are, as William McGurn puts it, “minds as well as mouths”. (13) We don’t passively live off the land, but actually improve it in many ways. Even though many of us may consume more than we contribute, a few people with innovative ideas can make an enormous difference. The more people there are in the world, the more people there are to cure diseases, develop new agricultural techniques, and so on. New technologies have the potential to benefit everyone, not just now, but in the future as well. And ideas, unlike natural resources, aren’t consumed when we use them.

In his excellent book The Infinite Resource, Ramez Naam asked whether we would better off if only half as many people had ever lived. (14) The world, of course, would be unspoiled in many ways. But it’s not clear we would be better off, since we’d also be without the contributions of all the people who had never lived. Consider that two thousand years ago—when roughly around half as many people as have lived today had lived—there was little plumbing and no electricity. Child mortality was high, and life expectancies were half what they are now. There was no democracy in the modern sense and most of humanity lived a meager, second-class existence. It might be that we would be better off in some sense today—now that many of us live already in free, technologically-advanced societies—if there were half as many people. But we owe the innovations that made our modern way of life possible to the people who lived over the last 2,000 years. So too the people who are alive now will help solve the problems we face now.

Feeding another 2.4 billion people—a third as many as are already alive today—will be a challenge in many ways. But thanks to increases in agricultural productivity we already produce about enough food today to feed the projected population of 2050 about as well as we fed the population of 1960. Unless there’s some catastrophe, the planet should be able to support the additional people with the technology we already have.

Conspicuous Consumption

The greatest stress on global resources is not how many of us there are, but how much we consume. Broadly speaking, our ecological impact has grown with the global economy. As we’ve become richer, we’ve eaten more food, used more energy, produced more waste, and generally put more pressure on the natural systems that we depend on for our survival. While the planet should be able to support even a growing population, it’s not clear the planet can support a growing population as well as we might like.

We are getting rich fast. The global average income increased roughly 125% over the last 20 years. Over that same period the global population grew just 30%. Most of that growth is occurring in parts of the world where the average person consumes relatively little. While the global population is beginning to peak, there is still plenty of room for the world to develop economically. But if everyone in the world earned as much as the average American does, the global economy would be around five times as large as it is today. It should go without saying that we’d be pushing the limits of the planet’s natural systems to support us if our impact approached five times what it is now.

The truth is that a substantial majority of the world’s energy and land supports a wealthy minority of the population. The 34 OECD countries—which contain less than 20% of the world’s population—use about half of the world’s commercially-produced energy. Every person born in Nigeria certainly increases the overall human ecological footprint. But the average American has a total footprint around five and a half times larger than the average Nigerian. Among other things, Americans emit on average 35 times the amount of carbon dioxide Nigerians do. Simply flying one way between New York and Los Angeles produces more carbon emissions than the average Nigerian does in a whole year. So it’s hard to take academics from the developed world seriously when they argue there should be fewer people—much less when they talk about sterilizing people against their will—while they continue flying to conferences. As Robert Wilson puts it, we should probably worry “more about rich people driving luxury cars than poor people having more babies.” (15)

But the connection between economic growth and environmental impact is not as simple as it might seem. While there is a clear relationship between national wealth and carbon emissions, for example, there’s also a fair amount of variation among different countries. Norway and Switzerland have roughly the same standard of living as the US while producing much less carbon dioxide per person. Some of the difference is the result of technical and institutional choices those countries have made. That means that even with currently-available technology high emitters like the US should be able to dramatically lower their carbon emissions without substantially reducing their standards of living.

Nor is there a fixed relationship between the size of the economy and carbon emissions. Emissions aren’t growing as fast as the world economy. Every year we create more economic value for every ton of carbon we emit into the atmosphere. As countries become richer and move farther out of poverty, it makes sense for them to spend more to reduce the damage they do to the environment. Richer countries have made an effort—if not as much of an effort as we might like—to reduce their carbon emissions. Poorer countries, where population spends a larger share of its income just to get by, are less likely to invest in clean energy. But they nevertheless benefit from clean energy technologies developed in the richer countries. Globally, we produce around three and half times as much today per ton of carbon emitted than we did in 1980. There’s reason to think that carbon emissions—along with other ways we impact the environment—may eventually “decouple” from economic growth, so the world economy can grow without more doing more damage to the planet’s natural systems.

Even though a growing economy puts more stress on the planet in the short term, faster growth may actually help us create sustainable societies more quickly. The richer we are, the more resources we have to mitigate or repair the damage we’ve already done. In addition, as people around the world move out of poverty, they are able to contribute more to our store of knowledge. Right now the talent of many potential scientists’ and inventors’ goes to waste in poor countries because they don’t have the opportunity to develop or to use it. Alex Tabarrok pointed out several years ago that if the whole world were as wealthy as the US, there would be more than five times as many scientists and engineers as there are. (16) A wealthier, more educated world would also means a larger market for new technologies. Tabarrok noted that if both China and India were as rich as the US, the market for cancer treatments—along with the incentive to develop them—would be 8 times larger. The larger the world economy grows, the more resources and the greater incentives we find solutions to a whole host of problems.

Economic growth certainly must not come at the expense of our survival. It isn’t worth mortgaging our future for the sake of higher-definition televisions. But economic growth isn’t simply a luxury we can easily do without. Most of the world is still poor by the standards of the developed world. For billions of people, greater wealth would mean longer, healthier lives and better educations. Economic growth isn’t by itself the solution to the global poverty—we could certainly use the resources we already have better than we do—but it is dramatically improving the lives of billions of people around the world. Trying to restrain growth may be, as Peter Kareiva, Michelle Marvier, and Robert Lalasz have written, “unfair, if not unethical, when directed at the 2.5 billion people who live on less than two dollars a day and the one billion who are chronically hungry.” (17)

Fortunately, growth is not in itself the problem. What will determine our fate, to a large extent, is not whether the world economy grows, but how it grows. Growth may slow on its own—particularly to the extent that it depends on a supply of cheap energy in the form of oil—as the costs of using the planet’s resources increase. But either way we should take measures to make sure that growth improves rather than diminishes our ability to thrive. Rather than trying to limit growth directly, we need to make sure—through things like cap-and-trade schemes—that market prices and legal incentives reflect the real environmental costs of our economic activities. Because those with entrenched interests in the old system of incentives will fight any changes, it won’t be easy.

We have work to do if we want to continue to live comfortably on Earth. The challenges we face today may prove to be more difficult to overcome than the challenges we’ve faced before. While it would be silly to assume that there are no technical solutions to the problems we face, it would be foolish to count on technologies that haven’t been invented yet to solve our problems. And, as Vaclav Smil has pointed out, it’s likely to take decades to switch over to cleaner, more efficient sources of energy. (18) The longer it takes, the greater the chance of disaster. No one really knows at what point the damage we are doing to the planet will be catastrophic or irreversible.

“Our progress in the use of science has been great,” President Kennedy wrote, “but our progress in ordering our relations small.” (19) We’re still not close to any hard limits to growth. The technological challenges we face should be manageable. The real question is not whether we are theoretically capable of surviving. It’s whether in fact we’ll manage to do what we have to before it’s too late. The battle to save humanity certainly isn’t over. But we do have to fight if we want to win.

Terraced fields of Sa Pa, Vietnam image courtesy of Robert Tannemaat under a Creative Commons Attribution Generic license. The image has been cropped.

(1) William and Paul Paddock, Famine 1975! (1967)

(2) Paul R. Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (1968)

(3) Amartya Sen, Poverty and Famines (1981)

(4) Thomas Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798)

(5) E.O. Wilson, The Future of Life (2002)

(6) Donella H. Meadows, Jørgen Randers, and Donella Meadows, Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update (2004)

(7) Johan Rockström et al., “A Safe Operating Space for Humanity” in Nature (September 24, 2009)

(8) Julian Simon, “Resources, Population, and Environment” in Science (June 27, 1980)

(9) Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne, Garry D. Peterson, Maria Tengö, et al., “Untangling the Environmentalist’s Paradox” in BioScience (September 2010)

(10) Siegfried Franck, Werner von Bloh, et al., “Harvesting the Sun” in Ecological Modelling (January 2011)

(11) Erle Ellis, “Overpopulation Is Not the Problem” in The New York Times (September 13, 2013)

(12) Ronald Reagan, Remarks at the University of South Carolina’s Convocation Ceremonies (September 20, 1983)

(13) William McGurn, “And Baby Makes Seven Billion” in The Wall Street Journal (October 24, 2011)

(14) Ramez Naam, The Infinite Resource (2013)

(15) Ronald Wilson, “Limiting Population Growth Is Not the Answer to Global Warming” in The Breakthrough (October 28, 2013)

(16) Alex Tabarrok, “How Ideas Trump Crises”, TEDTalk (February 2009)

(17) Peter Kareiva, Michelle Marvier, Robert Lalasz, “Conservation in the Anthropocene” in The Breakthrough Journal (Winter 2012)

(18) Vaclav Smil, “Moore’s Curse and the Great Energy Delusion” in The American (November 18, 2008)

(19) John F. Kennedy, White House Memo on the Twentieth Anniversary of the First Man-Made Nuclear Chain Reaction (1962)

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