A baby born somewhere yesterday would be the world’s 8 billionth person, according to a projection by the UN.
“The milestone is an occasion to celebrate diversity and advancements while considering humanity’s shared responsibility for the planet,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement.
The UN attributes the growth to human development, with people living longer thanks to improvements in public health, nutrition, personal hygiene and medicine.
Photo: EPA-EFE
It is also the result of higher fertility rates, particularly in the world’s poorest countries — most of which are in sub-Saharan Africa — putting their development goals at risk.
Population growth has also magnified the environmental impacts of economic development, but while some worry that 8 billion humans is too many for planet Earth, most experts say the bigger problem is the overconsumption of resources by the wealthiest people.
“Some express concerns that our world is overpopulated,” UN Population Fund Executive Director Natalia Kanem said. “I am here to say clearly that the sheer number of human lives is not a cause for fear.”
Joel Cohen of Rockefeller University’s Laboratory of Populations said the question of how many people Earth can support has two sides: natural limits and human choices.
Our choices result in humans consuming far more biological resources, such as forests and land, than the planet can regenerate each year. The overconsumption of fossil fuels, for example, leads to more carbon dioxide emissions, responsible for global warming.
“We are stupid. We lacked foresight. We are greedy. We don’t use the information we have. That’s where the choices and the problems lie,” Cohen said.
However, he rejects the idea that humans are a curse on the planet, saying people should be given better choices.
The current population is more than three times higher than the 2.5 billion global headcount in 1950.
However, after a peak in the early 1960s, the world’s population growth rate has decelerated dramatically, Rachel Snow of the UN Population Fund said.
Annual growth has fallen from a high of 2.1 percent from 1962 to 1965, to below 1 percent in 2020.
That could potentially fall further to about 0.5 percent by 2050 due to a continued decline in fertility rates, the UN projects.
The world body projects the population to continue growing to about 8.5 billion in 2030, 9.7 billion in 2050 and peaking at about 10.4 billion in the 2080s.
However, other groups have calculated different figures.
The US-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation estimated in a 2020 study that the global population would max out by 2064, without ever reaching 10 billion, and decline to 8.8 billion by 2100.
Since the emergence of the first humans in Africa more than 2 million years ago, the world’s population has ballooned, with only fleeting pauses to the increasing number of people sharing Earth.
Our ancestors were hunter-gatherers, who had few children compared to later settled populations in order to maintain their nomadic lifestyle.
The introduction of agriculture in the Neolithic era, at about 10,000 BC, brought the first known major population leap.
With agriculture came sedentarization and the ability to store food, which caused birth rates to soar.
From about 6 million in 10,000 BC, the global population leapt to 100 million in 2,000 BC and then to 250 million in the 1st century AD, the French Institute for Demographic Studies said.
As a result of the Black Death, the human population dropped between 1300 and 1400, from 429 million to 374 million.
Other events, like the Plague of Justinian, which hit the Mediterranean over two centuries from 541 to 767, and the wars of the early Middle Ages in western Europe, also caused temporary dips in the number of humans on Earth.
From the 19th century on, the population began to explode, due largely to the development of modern medicine and the industrialization of agriculture, which boosted global food supplies.
Since 1800, the world’s population has jumped eight-fold, from an estimated 1 billion to 8 billion.
The development of vaccines was key, with the smallpox jab particularly helping zap one of history’s biggest killers
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