Ashwani and All,

Let me start by conceding Ashwani's penultimate point:  the immediate focus in 
the US and EU should be on reduction of resource consumption.  Some pollution 
reduction is harder to localize because much manufacturing has moved out of the 
US and EU but much pollution is still generated within their political 
boundaries and so that is also a rational immediate focus.  But I still think 
that population is also a necessary focus although I do see that, as a resident 
of a net population importer, I am advocating for solutions others must adopt.  
However, the assertion that a focus on population shifts the burden to the 
Third World in the same response that claims 9 billion for the stable human 
population and also reminds us that equity is an absolute requirement for a 
just future and, finally, implores us to think about it makes a mix from which 
interesting questions arise.  Given 9 billion, equity of ecological footprint, 
and the requirement that we do not exceed Earth's carrying capacity, what would 
the average person's life look like (assuming no breathtaking technological 
advances)?  Could one own a car, live in a ranch house, commute to work, etc. 
at present levels of technology?  Is a population of 9 billion unsustainable at 
a reasonable living standard (I ask this from an American's perspective and 
realize that "reasonable" is a value judgment)?  I don't ask these questions 
rhetorically but to elicit links or references to sources that have crunched 
the data to answer these questions.  After all, by advocating for equity and 
ecological stability we are asking for the future inherent in these numbers 
(once again, assuming current technologies)

One question I do have that will not be answered by any amount of historical 
analysis is this:  is Ashwani's faith in technology justified?  Technology has 
produced much of the pollution and must be considered as part of the problem as 
well as a possible solution.

To be honest, I ask the above questions because I fear we have, in fact, bumped 
into some global limitations and that, without faith in technology, thinks look 
bleak.

Phil Ganter

Biology Department
Tennessee State University


On 12/18/08 9:58 AM, "Ashwani Vasishth" <[email protected]> wrote:

Actually, I think this is a conversation that needs to happen here--both 
because ecologists need to be engaged in this discussion, and because a truly 
ecological perspective is sorely missing from the population debate.

May I submit that, from a process-function view, that population is not the big 
problem for planetary carrying capacity--rather we need to be watching 
consumption and pollution, and that includes GHG emissions.

Ehrlich and Holdren and Commoner gave us I=P*A*T.  As a life-long Third 
Worlder, I would suggest there are real reasons why population cannot be the 
wedge we use to get at carrying capacity.  But at least, read Kates, 
Population, Technology and the Human Environment: A Thread Through Time.

I'm sure we have a carrying capacity problem.  But a sustainability frame 
includes equity.  Making this about population puts the problem of carrying 
capacity on the shoulders of the Third World.  In effect, we externalize the 
problem onto "them," and can then sit back and enjoy the "fruits of Western 
Civilization" for ourselves.  Making this about consumption, and to some extent 
about pollution, puts the problem squarely where I believe it belongs, on us.

Think about it.  The world population is at 6.7 billion (and most likely to 
stabilize around nine billion).  America has a population of 300 million and is 
said to use 30% of the world's resources.  India and China have a population of 
over 2.5 billion, and they want what we got--mainly because we've spent decades 
telling them that what we got is what they ought to want.  Hollywood ensures 
that the American "way of life" be the ideal that all civilizations shoot for, 
in order to show that they too are modern.

Its roosting time, folks.  Anything we can possibly do about population will 
have a lag time of decades.  Anything we do about consumption and pollution can 
have immediate impacts.  The choice is ours.

And yes, innovation, though taken differently than Julian Simon meant it, is 
still the answer.

Cheers,
-
  Ashwani
     Vasishth            [email protected]          (818) 677-6137
            --------------------------------------------------------
                                        Director
                            Institute for Sustainability
                   http://blogs.csun.edu/sustainability

                                 Assistant Professor
          Department of Urban Studies and Planning
                    http://www.csun.edu/~vasishth/
            --------------------------------------------------------




At 9:29 AM -0500 12/18/08, Kevin Mueller wrote:
>I think some folks are still missing Jane's point about overpopulation.  While 
>I wouldn't disagree with Andy or Bill's responses regarding the validity of 
>borders to overpopulation in some contexts, both of these responses ignore 
>that 'overpopulation' at a sub-global scale can be alleviated by imports, etc. 
>(e.g. Canada as Andy describes).  Globalization is not going away soon, 
>regardless if some would rather see populations and economies be sustainable 
>at the local or regional level.  As long as the economy is global, I think the 
>most relevant scale to discuss overpopulation is at the global level (but not 
>the only, especially you you are living in the third world).
>
>I have not heard or read anything which convinces me that we can't sustain our 
>current growing population (globally or within the US for example) with some 
>wealth and food redistribution and reasonable technological advances.  For 
>example, how do we know we are not underestimating the contribution of 
>innovation as EhrIich did?  I am NOT suggesting that there aren't costs of 
>globalization (e.g. burning fossil fuel to import food to Canada), that there 
>aren't regions of overpopulation currently not 'saved' by globalization (e.g. 
>Africa), or that technology will save us all and we should continue business 
>as usual.  Anyone know of any good books or articles addressing the 
>sustainability of global populations?  I am especially looking for positions 
>with solid backing here rather than editorials, although I know there is lots 
>of gray there.
>
>Should we think about continuing this discussion in a new venue to spare those 
>not as interested and not dilute the job adverts, etc?
>Perhaps a list-serve or other venue aimed explicitly at Ecology and Economics 
>would be more appropriate?
>
>Kevin

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