World's Population To Hit 7.75 Billion In 2019
Source: DW
The alarming increase is the estimate from a German foundation that monitors populations. It also suggests the 8 billion mark will be reached in the year 2023. By the end of this year there will be some 7.75 billion people living on planet earth, according to Germany's Foundation for World Population (DSW).
The estimate gauges that the world's population will have increased by 83 million since January 1 2019, which equates to roughly the number of inhabitants in Germany. The globe's population is increasing at the rate of 156 every minute and DSW predict the 8 billion mark will be surpassed within four years.
African population to double by 2050. The foundation also predicts that Africa's population will double over the next 20 years. An African mother bears 4.4 children on average compared to the global average of 2.4. The UN's "World Population Prospects" report released in June this year predicted that the world's population would grow to 9.7 billion by 2050.
The same report also predicted that by the same year, more than half the world's population would be concentrated in India, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Indonesia, Egypt and the United States. In addition, India is expected to overtake China as the world's most populous country by 2027...(Watch Video).
Read more: https://www.dw.com/en/worlds-population-to-hit-775-billion-in-2019/a-51758905
sandensea
(21,688 posts)But what we may run out of, is water.
Not coincidentally, billionaires and big players like Nestlé are buying fresh aquifers wherever they can (Bush among them).
Auggie
(31,207 posts)sandensea
(21,688 posts)Climate change worsens food shortages in desert,water-logged or overcrowded countries (mainly the very poor ones) - and this in turn forces their rural communities to deforest even more.
Thus exacerbating climate change, and so on.
Plus you've got assholes like Bolsonazi in Brazil who are deliberately herding his country's slum-dwellers (many millions) into the Amazon, so they won't bother the tourists.
Guess what they do once they get there.
CrispyQ
(36,540 posts)Water towers or any place where water is stored are being targeted.
sandensea
(21,688 posts)Australia isn't often thought of as a "desert country" - but as you know, most of it is.
It's just that most of its people have historically lived in the fertile valleys of New South Wales and along the coast.
Now even those areas are becoming semi-deserts - and they've got 25 million people plus a large agricultural sector.
In some ways, Australia is the canary in the coal mine for what more and more countries can expect by 2100 - not to mention poor desert countries in the Sahara.
What with their birthrates too!
bucolic_frolic
(43,364 posts)temperature stress in particular, for children and the elderly. but also food stress. i seem to remember from psy bio science that a certain percentage of fat is required for pregnancy. and pollution stress.
Jose Garcia
(2,607 posts)progree
(10,924 posts)Hmm, if it will double by 2039 or 2040 (2019 or 2020 plus 20), then it will almost certainly be well over double by 2050 which is 30 or 31 years away from 2019 or 2020. I'm guessing they meant to say "will double over the next 30 years".
(For comparions, The UN report predicts that by 2050, Africa's population will increase by 90.3% -- a factor of 1.903 -- which is just short of a doubling (factor of 2.000). )
UN numbers from the report and the interactive tool at
https://population.un.org/wpp/
(As an aside, the UN report does say Africa's Sub-Saharan population is projected to double by 2050, but not Africa as a whole, which one has to dig out with the interactive tool)
Sadlly the article didn't say what the Germany's Foundation for World Population predicts for 2050...
From this, link given in the article, and then clicking on "Translate This Page"
https://www.dsw.org/weltbevoelkerung-jahreswechsel/
So if the population is 7,754,847,000 at the end of 2019
then it will be 7,754,847,000 * 128/100 = 9,926,204 or so by 2050 -- higher than the UN's 9.7 billion figure.
OnlinePoker
(5,727 posts)You can go down to individual countries and see the various stats and trends.
https://countrymeters.info/en
Polybius
(15,510 posts)I didn't know that happened.
OnlinePoker
(5,727 posts)Sex selection or outright infanticide of girls have skewed their numbers completely out of the normal ranges. There are currently 54 million more males than females in China.
On edit: India has a similar situation, without even having the one-child policy.
onetexan
(13,071 posts)Google 'india female infanticide' & you can see the shocking articles that detail what a problem this is in India.
LudwigPastorius
(9,195 posts)msongs
(67,462 posts)roamer65
(36,747 posts)Maybe less when the wars start.
Im not gonna worry about it. I dont have children. Ive done my part to combat the problem.
Others need to step up and change their ways.
NickB79
(19,276 posts)Devouring all resources before us, leaving denuded ground behind.
I weep for the future my daughter will inherit. I figure she'll get to see the collapse of human civilization in the 70 years she has left here. He'll, I may get to see it if I live another 40-50 yr.
Humans are a plague upon this planet.
CrispyQ
(36,540 posts)I bought that bumper sticker at the turn of the century.
Brainfodder
(6,423 posts)NEXT?
roamer65
(36,747 posts)Severe enough to bring population growth to ZERO.
Collapse of the fiat currency system would do nicely.
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)which would naturally reduce the excess population without having to resort to drastic measures. The more educated and empowered women are in a society, the lower the birthrate. This is something that will take time, but it needs to happen if we want to control fertility in those nations that are unable to provide for the children they are producing.
roamer65
(36,747 posts)Women should not have to bear all of the burden of birth control.
Ilsa
(61,707 posts)progressoid
(50,000 posts)Even if all the third world stopped having babies, we'd still be in trouble.
The figures highlight the disproportionate carbon footprint of those who can afford to fly, with even a short-haul return flight from London to Edinburgh contributing more CO2 than the mean annual emissions of a person in Uganda or Somalia.
onetexan
(13,071 posts)Marengo
(3,477 posts)empedocles
(15,751 posts)inhabitants, 30-60% of the population in 'Europe'. [wiki]
Economic boom for surviving wage earners due to scarcity of labor.
Maxheader
(4,374 posts)Our teacher was going on about how quickly the worlds population was increasing...He also
was amazed at the usofas' population, which then was 200 million...1965...