Plan For Growth — or Get Swamped
BELLAGIO, Italy - Will Planet Earth be able to handle the mega-surge of people pouring into the cities of Africa, Asia and Latin America?
Back in 1950, there were 2.2 billion of us, mostly spread across the world's rural areas. Today the United Nations estimates world population at 6.6 billion. Half live in cities, where an accelerating human flood of rural people - many desperately poor - generates slums, endangers water and sewage systems, and breeds local misery and potential pandemics.
If today's birthrates continue unaltered, U.N. figures suggest there could be 11.7 billion people by 2050.
There is some good news here. Birth rates have declined as rural people migrate into cities and have fewer children than farm and rural families typically do. The mid-range population expectation for 2050 is 9.1 billion.
And humans have the power to effect huge change on our future numbers, Joel Cohen, head of the Laboratory of Populations at Rockefeller and Columbia universities, told a global Urban Summit, assembled by the Rockefeller Foundation, here last week.
If women, on statistical average, have half a child more than now predicted, Cohen noted, then the world population will soar to 10.6 billion. Conversely, if they choose to have a half child less, then the global population will rise to a comparatively more manageable 7.7 billion.
Already, decisions by families to have fewer children have brought us back halfway from the unprecedented fertility surge that increased world population by more than 2 percent a year in the late 1960s.
The problem is that the global population base has increased so radically that even seemingly modest birthrates can have momentous consequences. Cohen calculates that if we do add 2.5 billion people by 2050, then the world will have to build one city of 1 million people every week for the next 43 years. "Is this," he asks, "feasible - physically, environmentally, financially, socially?"
One sort of shudders at the answer. But there is a first step: Get a handle on growth of the world's cities. Breakthrough research on that very point, by Stephen Sheppard and his Williams College colleagues, was presented at the Bellagio conference. Using Landsat satellite images of a sampling of 120 world cities - one set taken around 1990, another around 2000 - they were able to show global cities' dynamic form of growth - how much they move to the urban periphery ("outspill"), or find space inside ("infill").
On top of that, the Landsat readings permitted intensity light readings indicating types of land use, pixel by pixel, down to very small areas. Then the Williams team matched its images with census-type information from each city to estimate actual population and per capita income.
What are they discovering? It turns out new residents don't cause a city to expand physically at quite the rate of population growth. But they still cause, on a worldwide average, seven times more outspill than infill. America's suburban sprawl may look different, but the pattern of geographic expansion is worldwide.
Now Sheppard can predict how fast the population growth will force cities to infill or expand onto new territory. Just take the average of a region's population growth and income growth, he has found, and you can approximate the answer.
One wonders how cities will receive the news. At current trends, São Paulo, Brazil, for example, will need a stunning 7.5 square miles and Shanghai an even more extreme 14 square miles of new development every year.
The bottom line is clear: The developing world's cities - and the developed world's cities still expanding significantly - must plan early, much more carefully, or expect to be overwhelmed by a virtual growth tsunami.
Good planning, for example, can recycle underused urban land, or schedule better use of expansion areas, to achieve much greater people-carrying capacity. Good planning can avoid some of the worst modern traffic jams, put public transit first, make walking and biking conven-ient, and preserve pockets of green space critical to humans' physical and emotional health.
Sheppard sees a frightening tide of population growth enveloping cities. He urges they take their thousands of planning documents, too often focused on some ideal future, and update them to reflect realistic growth scenarios. If the 20th century was the century of freewheeling development worldwide, the 21st century needs to be one of much earlier, careful planning.
Is planning a boring word? Maybe? But how else can there be any hope for a sustainable century?
Neal Peirce's column appears alternate Mondays on editorial pages of The Times. His e-mail address is nrp@citistates.com
©2007 Seattle Times
Delicious
Digg
StumbleUpon
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
8 Comments so far
Show AllBigPhatJay:
What makes you so sure the Earth has balls?
Peace,
Ken Hausle
* I support HRes333 - Impeach the VP
** Hm
The earth will scratch mankind off it's balls like a dog does fleas.
Not many are talking here, so I can't be annoying anyone by adding another minor point, can I? Oh well, I think it is worthwhile.
Anyhow, I realized I forgot to mention lizards and toads. We have chameleons & skinks plus toads in our yard. I think it is mainly because I have over the last few years added many stones to the landscaping. Because the lizards and toads are cold-blooded, they need some heat, and the stones do nicely for this purpose particularly on a sunny day.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
* I support HRes333 - Impeach the VP
** It has been estimated that without the artificial subsidy provided by oil, the Earth can support about 2 billion people **
Who estimated this?
What were the assumptions?
Can you provide a link?
All I know is I live in a forested area, and in my own backyard there is an incredible density of LIFE. Birds, insects, worms, chipmunks, squirrels, spiders, grasses, trees, etc.
Of course, all of this life is in relative harmony with the environment and has "learned" to optimize its presence to the advantage of all. Humans could do likewise if we learn how to be ecologically reverent. If this were to occur, then I suspect many of the assumptions that went into the 2 billion figure would go by the wayside.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
* I support HRes333 - Impeach the VP
** Lets make Peace
Modern medicine is constantly looking for ways to lengthen the human lifespan, reduce infant mortality, allow people to survive heart attacks etc. This sounds good but what then? All of the years added to people's lifespans must someday be counterbalanced by fewer births or by massive mortality caused by some catastrophy or combination of catastrophies. Peak oil, climate change, changes in ocean PH, groundwater depletion, desertification, any number of possible complications of genetic engineering...the earth will clean itself of the infection of the human species. This does not mean the end of humans, just a rebalancing of the numbers. Two billion people on a sustainable basis? Maybe, but first the number may have to fall far below that until the earth heals itself.
There is considerable evidence that we are on the edge of the peak of oil extraction. It has been estimated that without the artificial subsidy provided by oil, the Earth can support about 2 billion people. Global warming is beginning to have very visible effects, but is expected to have much MUCH more drastic effects, even if we cut back resposibly now on greenhouse gas emissions, which we won't. There is experimentation with genetic engineering, nanotechnology, germ warfare, space-based weapons, new models of nuclear weapons.
In this complex world, the author wonders whether the human population will peak at 8 billion or 11 billion. It seems obvious to me that our numbers will crash before we ever get to 8 billion.
Just as the tsunami took 250,000 lives in a matter of hours, global warming, water scarcity and wars may act to lower these population estimates. It's hard to say which is more tragic.
"And humans have the power to effect huge change on our future numbers,..."
So true. Humans have the power. Collectively, we have the power.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
* I support HRes333 - Impeach the VP
** Lets make Peace.....