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Chapter 17.
Over 100 years ago the Club of Rome warned us that modern energy and medical technology was enabling us to breed like rabbits.  That warning still applies.
Our Food,
Water, Carbon Reserves, and Nuclear Energy.  Powering poverty at $100 a kilowatt.  Recall the $100 personal computer?

Wars come from lack of energy, lack of wealth.

POPULATION AND ENERGY
  Powering an end to poverty at $100 a kilowatt.
People who live without electricity have life spans half that of people who live with electricity.

Energy Correlates with Prosperity.   Prosperity Correlates with Fewer Children.

          
Part 1     Energy Correlates with Prosperity, Prosperity Correlates with Fewer Children
Part 2   
 Correlations. (a) Population Stability, (b) Prosperity vs. Population, (c) vs. Energy    
Part 3  
   Population Overload.
Part 4     2,000 Watt Society
Further Information.

NEWS ITEMS    for this subject. 

 

 

Introduction.

"How critical is cheap energy for developing countries? Bryce points out that Africa—a continent with 14 percent of the world's population—has developed only 3 percent of the world's electricity. Of the 15 countries in the world with the highest death rates, 14 of them are in Africa. Of the 22 countries with the highest infant mortality rates, 21 of them are in Africa. Many factors contribute to those high death rates, but a widespread availability of cheap energy would likely make life healthier for millions.

From "Gone with the Wind" - - Renewables like solar power and others can't fuel America's future. Say experts: Just do the math." - - Jamie Dean

"The International Energy Agency and World Coal Institute report a 10-year increase in life expectancy for every tenfold increase in electrical power availability.  Of the world's approximately 6.8 billion people, only 2.6 billion have adequate electrical power." - - A.J.S. Spearing, Ph.D., P.E.   ajsspearing@yahoo.com

 

Part 1: Population and Energy.  Energy correlates with prosperity.  Prosperity correlates with fewer children.

Energy Correlates with Prosperity
Prosperity Correlates with Fewer Children

Did you ever happen to read (or see on PBS) the 1978 book "Connections" by James Burke?  I feel like I've just had a "Connections" moment.  I think Robert Hargraves' Power Point presentation "Aim High" touches on a very important point that connects abundant energy availability with population growth.

To see it, play the first 7 minutes of the "Video" (slide + audio) presentation at: http://rethinkingnuclearpower.googlepages.com/AimHigh by Robert Hargraves

What it shows: Robert Hargraves cites CIA data that shows population growth trends to replacement as energy as per capita energy availability trends toward 2,000 kilowatt-hours per year and GDP trends toward $7,500 per year.  These are some of the necessary ingredients for a "Population-Neutral" world.

WHY? - Simple.  If you've got machines doing your work, children cease to be valuable appliances.  It's life's economics, not culture or religion.

In energy-starved Africa, children of the poor are commodities, often traded like cows or donkeys by adults who value their labor.

Slavery became obsolete when the age of steam got up to steam.  It's far cheaper to feed and maintain machines than it is to feed and maintain people.  Example: Healthcare cost is killing our car companies.  Think about all the large and tiny electric motors in all your household appliances - I counted about 50 once.  And you only have to feed them when they are doing work for you.  Think about your 200 horsepower car with its 20+ electric motors.

Abundant electricity is a pre-requisite for a higher standard of living.  Does this mean that by simply adding more electrical generation capacity to a country one can expect the birth rate to go down?  No, but this does show us the path to rolling back the human population has ample personal energy availability as a key component.

All businesses need abundant, inexpensive reliable energy.  And each individual's life is a small business.  Look at what is happening to California's economy right now as they become increasingly energy-emaciated due to state government policies promoting wind and solar and while banning new nuclear.  "Dim," "Flicker," and "Off" are not acceptable for traffic lights, water, or refrigeration, a few of the many things that must function consistently for our personal lives to function at all.

"Living better electrically." 
There is no better endorsement of an energy-abundant lifestyle than this.

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Part 2: Population and Energy.  Correlations. (a) Population Stability, (b) Prosperity vs. Population, (c) Prosperity vs. Energy    

Co-relations

I have never seen a stronger condemnation of Amory Lovins'  Rocky Mountain Institute's concept of
"Starving Yourself Strong" than the correlations shown below.

 

(a) Population Stability

 

 

 

 

(The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is an international organization of thirty countries that accept the principles of representative democracy and free-market economy. Most OECD members are high-income economies with a high Human Development Index and are regarded as developed countries.)

The United States actually has a negative birth rate among its citizens.  Population growth depends upon immigration.  Blue line represents citizen population only.

 

 

 

(b) Prosperity vs. Population

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(c) Prosperity vs. Energy

 

This is just the electricity energy component of a nation.  Coal, oil, and natural gas are almost always also components of a nation's energy portfolio.

Electricity, actually a secondary source of energy, is a very sophisticated form of energy.  A large electrical KWH per capita component implies a more advanced country.

(One KWH = 3,413 BTU = 3.6 x 106 Joules.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Part 3 Population and Energy.  Population Overload.

Population Overload:
 
Our Food, Water, Carbon Reserves, and Nuclear Energy.
  Powering poverty at $100 a kilowatt.


 

"Prosperity stabilizes population"  by Robert Hargraves, from "Aim High."

 

WHY? - Simple.  If you've got machines doing your work, children cease to be valuable appliances.  It's life's economics, not culture or religion.  In energy-starved Africa, children of the poor are commodities, often traded like cows or donkeys by adults who value their labor.

It's not uncommon for the average U.S. household to have 50 electric motors in their appliances, a U.S.  automobile, 25.

Books about population overload:  Cold, Clear, and Deadly

 

For starters, the author would like to cite a posting by Kurt Cobb on his web site:   http://ResourceInsights.blogspot.com/

A brief ecological manifesto

Posted by Kurt Cobb, Sunday, July 05, 2009

 
I'm not a European, but I play one on the Internet--at least for the next month. Comment: Visions, a website which "explores the personal views of thinkers, innovators and scientists about possible solutions to global warming, overpopulation and dwindling resources," asked me and other "European intellectuals and leaders" to respond to the following question for the month of July posting: What can we do to ensure that generations to come have a sustainable future?

Comment: Visions is a collaboration between The European Voice, a newspaper which covers the European Parliament, and the euronews [sic] television channel, both of which are owned by The Economist Group, owners of The Economist magazine and other publications. The Comment: Visions site is produced in association with Shell, a fact which gave me some misgivings. But as I looked at the previous questions and responses, I discovered a wide range of views, some of them quite radical, at least by the standards of The Economist and Shell. And so, I decided to participate.

I attempted to write a concise, blunt assessment of our ecological predicament in hopes that perhaps at least one person of influence might read and understand what I believe we face. I have reproduced my answer below. For the other answers, go to the Comment: Visions home page for July.

Now to the mystery of how I became a European intellectual. The site clearly invites non-Europeans to participate. I took the phrase "European intellectual and leader" from one of the emails I received and was pleased at what I perceived to be a promotion. I think the site operators may have gotten my name from Scitizen, a science news site based in Paris for which I am a columnist. They never said how they came across my name.

In any case, here is what I wrote. See if you think I hit the mark for being concise and blunt.
We are in overshoot. Failure to recognize this fact and act on it will ultimately condemn humans worldwide to nature's cure for this condition: collapse. Overshoot is a well-defined ecological term; it means an organism is temporarily living beyond the long-term carrying capacity of its environment, that is, the ability of the environment to provide it with the needed food, energy and other resources for the long-term and to absorb the pollution it produces without destroying that carrying capacity.

Collapse is a more indefinite term, but it does not mean annihilation. Collapse in the case of human society implies a fairly rapid decline in population over perhaps many decades and the reorganization of society into smaller and far more decentralized units.

For those who say that this cannot happen, the onus is on them to show that the record of history (which is replete with such instances) and the findings of science no longer apply to humans. Our predicament is probably most aptly described by ecologist William Catton Jr. in his book entitled "Overshoot." The enabling substances for this overshoot have been fossil fuels. They have provided a one-time endowment of exceptionally concentrated energy which we have used to extract large yields from farms, forests, mines, fisheries and factories. Fossil fuels have enabled us to increase our population and our wealth exponentially in the last 150 years.

But once these finite fuels are burned, they are gone forever. The long-run alternative is solar, its derivatives of wind and water power, and possibly nuclear power. However, our problems run deeply across multiple natural systems--climate, fisheries, water, farm fields, and forests to name a few. Merely deploying alternative energy quickly enough to replace fossil fuels will not solve all our problems. In fact, increasing our use of energy could put even more pressure on the very natural systems upon which our lives depend.

How then are we to climb down off this ledge of overshoot and avoid crashing headlong into the valley of collapse? And, what should our destination be? The historical record has only a handful of examples of long-term sustainable societies, and they are based on agriculture and hunting and gathering. The Indian agricultural village and the Australian Aboriginal culture come to mind. But few people in industrialized nations desire a return to such forms of human society. When modern people speak of sustainability, they mean a sustainable industrial society. And so, we are in uncharted waters for there is no historical example of such a society to guide us.

We must rely instead on certain principles to tell us what to do. The bedrock principle that nature suggests is this: We cannot have infinite growth in the consumption of resources inside a finite system, the Earth. If we are in overshoot, as I suggest, then we are beyond the point of growing and must recede from our current consumptive habits.

How can we achieve this? I admit that my solution is one no sane politician would embrace: a steady-state economy, that is, an economy in which neither the throughput of material resources nor the associated pollution would grow. The quality of goods and services, however, could continue to increase so long as that increase in quality does not demand the use of additional resources. And, the satisfactions we obtain from nonmaterial sources such as friends and family, athletic and artistic pursuits, and religious practice could continue to deepen and grow indefinitely. Note, however, that while this is the description of a steady-state economy, it is not one of a steady-state society. Both the economic and cultural life of such a society would continue to evolve.

All of this seems hard enough to imagine, let alone implement. But we must go even further for we cannot achieve a sustainable, steady-state economy by merely ceasing to grow. Rather, because we are already in overshoot, we need to reduce drastically our use of resources, especially energy. This will doubtless require new technology to make us vastly more efficient. But it will also require that we rearrange our lives and change our habits so as to accomplish our goals by using far fewer resources than we do today. We will also need to bring down population gradually over time to a level consistent with long-term sustainability.

While what I'm suggesting may seem like an impossible political task, it is the only feasible solution for a sustainable industrial society. Either we summon the will to bring about a steady-state economy or nature will tragically and remorselessly implement one for us. These are our choices

 

Part  4:

The 2,000 Watt Society.

2,000 Watt Society.  2,000 watts continuous or 17,520 watt-hours per year per person.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000-watt_society

We will have to move to nuclear so everyone in the world can enjoy a 10,000 Watt life.

Not take away from the energy-rich so polar bears can have a comfortable life.

Intellectuals with zero capacity to build and fix things
are a major reason our society is headed in the wrong direction.

 

 

Further Information.

BOOKS about Population Overload

Cold, Clear, and Deadly

 

www.ColdClearAndDeadly.com   Unraveling a toxic legacy.  Melvin J. Visser,  Michigan State University Press,  ISBN 978-0-87013-802-7

 

 

The Problem:

The waters of our Northern Hemisphere are deadly. Toxics are carried to them by a polluted mantle of air containing hundreds of millions of molecules per breath full of persistent pesticides such as chlordane, toxaphene, Dieldrin, PCBs, Lindane, hexachlorobenzene, and DDT. Human health and wildlife survival continues to suffer from chemicals that were long banned because they promoted human cancer or caused acute environmental devastation.

These highly chlorinated, persistent organic pollutants (POPs) circulate with global weather and distribute around the globe according to their volatility. Lindane, relatively volatile, was found in the Arctic Ocean at 40 times the concentration of ocean waters near its temperate region uses. PCBs smear out through the mid latitudes and decrease towards the north. Toxaphene and chlordane settle in north of PCBs. They must be stopped.

The Human Effect:

Everyone: Researchers continue to connect the presence of low levels of POPs with diabetes, cancer, asthma and other diseases. Is it surprising to find that chemicals designed to destroy life may be interfering with human health?

Inuit: POPs enter the food chain at the microscopic level and remain in the fat of living creatures, bioaccumulating up the food chain to the point that the fat of Arctic narwhal and beluga whales would be classified as hazardous waste. Inuit of Northern Canada and Greenland, who consume this fat as well as that of seals, polar bear and walrus as a portion of their diet, are highly contaminated. Canadian Inuit women of child bearing age consume 14 times the tolerable daily intake (TDI) of chlordane, toxaphene, PCBs and other pesticides. They suffer infertility, stillbirths and birth defects. Many of their children have compromised immune systems, suffering near constant colds and flus that leave them hearing impaired.

Wildlife:

The Great Lakes: Waters from the Chesapeake to San Francisco Bays are contaminated with POPs. Toxaphene levels in Lake Superior, banned in 1982, have increased 50% since banning. Lower Great Lakes PCB levels fall slowly as they vent their excesses to the atmosphere, but Lake Superior has maintained a constant level of PCBs for decades. It is in equilibrium with the toxic mantle of global air and controlled by it! Fish reproduction is impaired and eagles cannot reproduce on a diet from the waters of the Great Lakes. Humans are advised to restrict consumption or avoid eating Great Lakes fish.

The Arctic: Polar bears of the Hudson Bay area may suffer from the lack of ice and seals in the summer, but their brothers to the north have higher levels of POPs and experience half their lifespan and half their reproductivity. Killer whales, leaving the Pacific Northwest to feed on mammal pups in the Arctic return without their mature males. The nursing pups are very toxic from their mother’s milk. Female killer whales vent POPs through their own milk while males continue to accumulate POPs. Their compromised immune systems make them vulnerable to death from infections.

Banned Chemicals?

We banned these chemicals in the 1970s and 80s after using them for a couple decades. Unfortunately, through the Green Revolution of the 1960s, our high yielding agriculture was exported to India, Pakistan and Asia to save hundreds of millions of lives using chemicals we subsequently banned. The developing countries have now used these chemicals for their expanding agricultural business for a half a century. China now exports 3.5 billion pounds of food per year to the U.S. food grown with pesticides we’ve banned pesticides that make their way back to our waters.

The Stockholm Convention is a 2001 voluntary agreement to globally ban POPs. Since 2001, there has been nothing voluntarily accomplished that will improve the health of our waters. Global business continues unfettered while poisons pour into the air and find our waters. There will not be any efforts in developing countries without diplomatic carrots or sticks. This will not happen until citizens of the developed world let their elected representatives know that they are tired of breathing contaminated air and not being able to enjoy the fish from our cold, clear deadly waters.

Do Something:

Don’t ignore the opportunity to pass this message to all your friends the same list that you sent the last cute little joke you received. Then let the politicians who are now campaigning about how they will protect your health care dollar know that you would prefer that they clean up our air so there will be less illness and health care cost!

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WEB LINKS for this subject.

http://rethinkingnuclearpower.googlepages.com/AimHigh by Robert Hargraves

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NEWS ITEMS for this subject.

Panel: Only Technology Can Guarantee Global Food Sustainability.
The UK's Press Association (1/21) reports, "Finding enough food and energy to sustain the Earth's population is the greatest technological challenge facing humanity, an expert panel of chemists and engineers have said." According to their report, "the world is heading for a food crisis caused by climate change and competition for land use," and "in the long term, only technology could guarantee global food sustainability." The experts "called for the creation of more genetically modified pest and drought resistant crops, as well as nutritionally enhanced plant foods," and "recommended a stronger focus on chemical engineering to improve water supplies, and the development of ways to generate energy from livestock waste." The report "said GM regulations must be 'based on an evaluation of the risk, using sound evidence, and not on a socio-political fear of new technology.'"

 

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End of Population Overshoot