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Demography The increase of the world population* Population histograms : ranking/country** Population curves between Europe and Afri Resources * http://www.ined.fr/en/everything_about_population/animat ions/world_population/ ** http://www.ined.fr/en/everything_about_population/popula tion_atlas/

Demography The increase of the world population* Population histograms : ranking/country** Population curves between Europe and Africa** Resources *

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Demography

The increase of the world population*

Population histograms : ranking/country**

Population curves between Europe and Africa**

Resources* http://www.ined.fr/en/everything_about_population/animations/world_population/** http://www.ined.fr/en/everything_about_population/population_atlas/

In 1999, there were 6 billion people living on Earth, and by 2011 or 2012, the population will reach 7 billion.

Why is the world population increasing so fast ?And what will happen in the future ?

Introduction

The increase of the world population

Population growth today

World population history

The demographic transition

The future world population : explosion, implosion, or

equilibrium ?

Conclusion

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Population growth today

The increase of the world population

Every second, on average, four babies are born.

Every second, on average, two people die.

Every second, on average, the population increased by two people.

Two more people per second means 200 000 more people per day, and 75 million more people per year. In other words, the world population – 6,5 billion

in 2005 – is growing by 1,2 percent each year.

At this 1,2 % annual growth rate, the population doubles evrey 60 years. If the number of people on Earth carried on increasing at this speed, the 6,5 billion in

2005 would become 13 billion in 2065, 26 billion in 2125 ans so on. But the population does not grow at the same speed indefinitely. On the contrary, the

United Nations predict that the world population will level off at around 9 billion people before the end of the century.

Why is that ?

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World population history

The increase of the world population

Billions of inhabitants

World population increase in the last two thousand years

Throughout most of human history, the number of people on Earth could be counted in just hundreds of thousands or in millions, and the population increased very slowly. Two thousand yeras ago, there were around 250 million people in

the world, and by the end of the 18th century the total had reached one billion. At around that time, the population started growing much faster. From one billion in 1800, it rose to two billion in

1927, 3 billion in 1960, 4 billion in 1974, 5 billion in 1987 and 6 billion in 1999. Whe should reach 7 billion by around 2011 or 2012, and growth will not stop there. So what will happen next ?

The United Nations are forecasting that the world population will level off at a mere » 9 billion by around 2050. How did they reach this figure ?

And looking back in history, why did the population grow so slowly up to the eighteenth century ? Why did it start rising so fast from then on ?

0 500 1000 1500 2000 years

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The demographic transition

The increase of the world population

Back

The future world population : explosion, implosion, or

equilibrium ?

The increase of the world population

Billions of inhabitants

World population projections to 2300 : scenario 1

1950 2000 2050 2100 2150 2200 2250 2300 years

In the demographic transition model, fertility stabilizes at the remplacement level – two children per woman – when mortality is low.The United Nations have imagined a scenario in which future families each have exactly two children on average, in which case the world population would level off after reaching 9 billion.

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The increase of the world populationThe future world population :

explosion, implosion, or equilibrium ?

Billions of inhabitants

1950 2000 2050 2100 2150 2200 2250 2300 years

World population projections to 2300 : scenario 2

But in many countries where the demographic transition is complete, average fertility is well below 2 children per woman. For example, it was 1,5 in the countries of the European Union in 2005, and 1,3 in Japan. If very small families became a world-wide model over the long term, the world population would peak at 9 billion then start declining until human beings eventually died out altogether.

BackNext

The increase of the world populationThe future world population :

explosion, implosion, or equilibrium ?

Billions of inhabitants

1950 2000 2050 2100 2150 2200 2250 2300 years

World population projections to 2300 : scenario 3

Fertility may also start increasing again in the countries where it is currently very low, stabilizing at 2,3 children worlwide. This would result in continuous growth – up to 37 billion in 2300 – and here agaiun the ultimate disappearnce of the human race, this time due to overpopulation.

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The increase of the world populationThe future world population :

explosion, implosion, or equilibrium ?

Billions of inhabitants

1950 2000 2050 2100 2150 2200 2250 2300 years

World population projections to 2300 : scenario 4

Under the so-called « contant fertility » scenario, in which fertility remains at its current level for the next three centuries, the population would reach 134 000 billion in the year 2300 !But this scenario is unrealistic, since fertility is decreasing throughout the world. It simply shows us how continuous growth leads to explosion within a very short time. These catastrophic scenarios, resulting in the extinction of the human race through implosion or explosion, are not the only alternatives. We need to imagine a return to equilibrium over the long term. The medium scenarios based on assumption that achieve a long-term balance, such as fertility of exactly two children per woman for example. It is no more realistic than the high or low scenarios, but simply shows what path needs to be followed if we to survive beyond the next few centuries.

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In 1999, Humankind is starting to control its population growth. But to ensure a decent standard of living for 9 billion people, we will need to manage the planet’s resources more efficiently and share them more equitably. Over the long term, the survival of the human race depends as much – if not more –

upon our way of life as upon our number.

Conclusion

The increase of the world population

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Population histograms : ranking/country

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1950

2000

2050

Population histograms : ranking/country

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1950 1975 2000 2025 2050 1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

1

2

1

2

billions billions

Population

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

4

8

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

4

8

Number of children per

woman

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

110

220

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

110

220

millions millions

Population aged 65 and

above