Visualizing Environmental Science

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166 CHAPTER 7 Human Population Change and the Environment

(Figure 7.8). The estimates vary depending on fertility
changes, particularly in less developed countries, because
that is where almost all of the growth will take place.
Population projections must be interpreted with
care because they vary depending on what assumptions
are made. In projecting that the world population will
be 8.1 billion (their low projection) in the year 2050,
U.N. population experts assume that the average num-
ber of children born to each woman in all countries
will have declined to 1.7 by 2045–2050. The average
number of children born to each woman on Earth is
currently 2.5. If the decline to 1.7 doesn’t occur, our
population could be significantly higher. If the aver-
age number of children born to each woman declines
to 2.17 in 2045–2050 instead of 1.5, the 2050 popula-
tion will be 9.3 billion (the U.N. medium projection).

increased life expectancy for a great majority of the
global population (Figure 7.7).

Projecting Future
Population Numbers
The human population has reached a turning point. Al-
though our numbers continue to increase, the world
growth rate (r) has declined slightly over the past sev-
eral years, from a peak of 2.2
percent per year in the mid-1960s
to the current growth rate of 1.2
percent per year. Population ex-
perts at the United Nations and the
World Bank project that the growth
rate will continue to decrease slowly
until zero population growth is attained toward the end of
the 21st century. Exponential growth of the human popu-
lation will end, and the S curve may replace the J curve.
The United Nations periodically publishes popula-
tion projections for the 21st century. The latest (2010)
U.N. figures forecast that the human population will
reach 9.3 billion in the year 2050 (their “medium” pro-
jection), and could range between 8.1 billion (their “low”
projection) and 10.6 billion (their “high” projection) Year

1800 1900 2000

High 10.6

Medium 9.3

Low 8.1

2050

Human population (billions)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Based on data from

World Population Prospects, The 2004 Revision, United Nations Population Division

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A child in Bangladesh receives a dose of oral polio vaccine.
At one time, polio killed or crippled millions of children each
year. Polio is still endemic (constantly present) in Nigeria, India,
Afghanistan, and Pakistan, and it sometimes spreads from those
countries to other countries.

World population projections
̜ÊÓäxäÊUʈ}ÕÀiÊÇ°nÊ
In 2010 the United Nations made three projections, each based
on different fertility rates.

zero population
growth The state in
which the population
remains the same size
because the birth rate
equals the death rate.

FARJANA KHANGODHULY/Stringer/AFP/Getty Images

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