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7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications

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Presentation on theme: "7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications"— Presentation transcript:

1 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
The world can be divided into two segments based on economic development. More-developed countries typically have per capita income exceeding $10,000. Europe, Canada, the U.S., Japan, Australia, New Zealand Combined population of 1.2 billion Relatively stable populations Expected to grow 3% by 2050

2 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
Less-developed countries typically have a per capita income less than $5,000. All other remaining countries of the world Combined population of 5.3 billion Nearly 3 billion live on less than $2 per day High population growth rates Expected to grow 52% by 2050 (8 billion people, or 86% of the world’s population)

3 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
Population growth and economic development

4 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
Human population growth is tied to economic development It is a contributing factor to nearly all environmental problems. The degree of technological development and affluence is also significant People in highly developed countries consume huge amounts of resources.

5 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
Technology: The technology used is an important contributor to environmental impact. Firewood for heat can lead to deforestation. Coal-fired power plants contribute to pollution. Wind and solar energy lower environmental impact.

6 7.8 Human Population Characteristics and Implications
The ecological footprint is a measure of the land area required to provide the resources and absorb the wastes of a population. Most of the more-developed countries of the world have a much larger ecological footprint than is represented by their land area. Japan is highly developed but has few resources; its ecological footprint is 5 times larger than its locally available resources. The ecological footprint of the U.S. is 1.5 times locally available resources.


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