1 The State of Nature Assessing the trends: Population, Consumption and Technology The end of more?
POL S 384 Lecture 2 2 Indicators of state of nature n n Population growth n n Food production n n Energy consumption n n Deforestation n n Species extinctions n n Desertification n n Fresh water shortage n n Ozone depletion n n Climate change
POL S 384 Lecture 2 3 The State of Nature n n E = P x C x T (or I = PAT) – –Human population growth n n Agricultural revolution n n Industrial Revolution – –1 billion in 1800; 6+ billion now n n The “Population Bomb” – –Rule of 72 – –Malthusians vs. Cornucopians n n UN prediction: ~10 billion by 2050 n n A note on population density n n Into the fray: Demographic transition theory – –Is affluence the solution?
POL S 384 Lecture 2 4
5 Consumption n n How much do we need? n n Hunter-gatherers compared to Americans – –2500 vs. 192,000 kcals. n n 40% of Earth's primary productivity supports humanity n n Have's & have-nots n n North compared to South – –Avg American footprint 20 Indians or 50 sub-Saharan Africans n n Analogy: Nora and Sam’s well n n Can affluence be globalized? n n Do ethics matter?
POL S 384 Lecture 2 6 Technology n n Fossil fuel-based economy – –Coal, oil, natural gas – –Primacy of oil – –Environmental effects n n Atmospheric pollution n n Marine pollution n n Deforestation, destruction of local habitat n n Renewables: solar, wind, hydrogen n n Can technology save us?
POL S 384 Lecture 2 7 An example: Carbon sequestration n “Virgin Earth Challenge” ~ $25 million for techs to capture 1 billion tons carbon/year n Some candidates: –Iron fertilization of the oceans –Bioengineering bacteria to eat CO 2 –Land-based algae tanks –Biocharcoal n