Too many people?



Chris Packham presented a BBC Horizon documentary 7.7 Billion People and Counting on the consequences of the rise in population. Packham is a patron of the controversial charity Population Matters. He concedes that “We’re so good at saving lives.” 


France had almost 150 years to adapt to the rise in aging population from 10 percent to 20 percent of the total, whereas China has to adapt to the change in slightly more than 20 years.

In England and Wales the birth rate hit a record low of 1.7 per woman in 2018.

About a quarter of schools in southwest Scotland are operating at less than 50 per cent capacity, figures have revealed. School rolls are falling in Dumfries and Galloway, which has experienced one of the highest rates of population decline in Scotland. A report to the council’s education and learning committee showed that about 6,000 more people died in the region than were born in the decade to 2018, causing the population to fall by 1.5 per cent.



Populations are already falling in many countries. Not since the Black Death and the great plagues of the Middle Ages have we seen population collapses of this magnitude. In rich countries, fertility rates have hovered below replacement levels of 2.1 children per woman for decades, but they are now below that threshold in middle-income countries across the world, from Iran to Thailand to Brazil. In South Korea, the fertility rate dipped to just 0.98 last year, and even in the US it hit an all-time low of 1.73 births per woman.Given parental desire to invest in each child, a fertility surge in rich countries is improbable. According to the latest World Population Prospects from the UN, 27 countries have fewer people now than in 2010, and it expects 55 nations — including China — to experience declines between now and 2050. In the 21st century, falling populations will become normal.



Bulgaria’s population was around 9 million at the end of the 1980s, but it fell to fewer than 7 million in 2018, and is expected to fall below 6 million in 50 years. The UN Population Division projects that Bulgaria will lose 23% of its population by 2050 – a projection so high that the country is neck-and-neck with Lithuania for the fastest shrinking population in the world. What sets Bulgaria apart from other declining European countries is its massive outbound migration. As many as 1.1 million Bulgarians estimated to live abroad a



Italy’s birth rate has fallen to 1.32 children per women, far below the 2.1 children needed to maintain a stable population over time



Hungary will be providing free IVF to couples to combat the country’s declining birth rate. Xenophobe Viktor Orban recently announced that women who bear four or more children will never have to pay income tax again, while newly married couples are eligible for a loan which will be written off if they have three children. Hungary’s population is expected to drop from 9.8 million to 8.3 million by 2050. Emigration has removed around one million people between 2008 and 2018, according to the OSCE,



Thailand’s latest population projections show the country is poised to undergo a shift that could soon create a worker shortage. The country is ageing at one of the fastest rates in the developing world.The forecast suggests Thailand’s population will continue to increase until 2028, before starting to decline.Jinanggoon Rojananan, deputy secretary general of the National Economic and Social Development Council said: “Fewer children are being born, and the fertility rate is consistently declining. In studying different countries, we haven’t seen any successful method to boost the birth rate, yet.” In just 20 years, senior citizens are expected to make up about one-third of Thailand’s population. At the same time, the working-age population will decrease from 65 percent to 56 percent. That statistic is raising concerns about the future of Thailand’s manufacturing industry.”In the near future, we need to improve production methods by adopting new technologies and innovations,” Jinanggoon said. “That’s the only way to boost the national income level enough to support the population.”
Japan doesn’t have enough babies and young workers to keep up its tax income and finances. From 2017 to 2050, the fourteen-and-under age cohort is forecast to fall by nearly 40 percent. The workforce (15–65) falls by 34 percent in the same period. Thus, not only is Japan’s population declining, its workforce is declining much faster than the population as a whole. After peaking in 2010 at 128 million, the country’s population has eased back to 126 million and will continue to decline. Its population is set to shrink by 0.4 percent annually, with the decrease expected to accelerate to 1.0 percent annually by the 2040s. By 2050, Japan will have 23 percent fewer citizens. Nor does it stop in mid-century. Demographers see current trends persisting to the end of the century, when Japan’s population falls to fifty million, only 40 percent of its all time high.
“Croatia suffers a population loss equivalent to losing a small city every year,” prime minister Andrej Plenkovic said. Croatia – which has a population of just 4.2 million – since it joined the EU. The World Bank projects the population to decline to 3.46 million by 2050. The EU estimates that 15 per cent of working-age Croats live in other EU countries, the second-highest such percentage in the union after Romania. The birth rate at 1.44 children per woman is 10 per cent below the EU average and close to one-third less than the natural replacement rate of 2.1 that countries need to hold their populations stable. Croatia is not alone in the Balkans to face such a population decline. 


On current projections, by 2050. Serbia 23.8 per cent fewer;  and Romania 30.1 per cent. Serbia has tried to provide cash benefits for each child, with an increasing scale for up to four children. 

Some 14.65 million babies were born in China last year, down from 15.23 million in 2018, and the lowest number since 1961, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) released on Friday. The birth rate fell to 10.48 per thousand, the lowest level since at least 1949. Fertility rates dropped from 5.9 births per woman in 1970 to about 1.6 in the late 1990s. The replacement level for a population is 2.1.To avoid a demographic crisis, the government relaxed its one-child policy in 2016 to allow people to have two children, but the change has not resulted in an increase in pregnancies. The workforce is expected to decline by as much as 23 per cent by 2050. “The demographic problem is a slow, long-term one,” He said. US-based academic Yi Fuxian, senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, believes that China’s population is over-estimated, and according to his work, the real population “began to decline in 2018”
By the end of 2018, the number of people aged above 60 had reached 249 million, more than 17 percent of the total population. And a country with more than 10 percent of its population above 60 is already labeled as an aging society. The population above 60 is widely expected to increase to 255 million in 2020.

India’s population has indeed reached 1.37 billion, according to the recently released United Nations World Population Prospects, and it will continue to increase over upcoming decades, even if all Indian families choose to have just two children, because of the sheer numbers of the population entering into the reproductive ages. However, we must recognise India’s significant declines in fertility.

Its
total fertility rate (TFR), the average number of children that would be born to a woman over her lifetime, is 2.2 and has reached replacement level (2.1), that is, the level of fertility at which a population exactly replaces itself from one generation to the next, in 17 of 28 states. This means that couples in most parts of India have just two children. And in the remaining states, the pace of the decline over the last decade has been significant in most areas, and across all social groups, and will likely reach replacement levels in the next two decades. The wanted total fertility rate in India, that is, the number of children a couple wants or wanted over the course of their married life is just 1.8, well below replacement level in all but four states




California’s population grew by just 50,635 people during the 12-month period ending July 1, which is close to a statistical zero. California barely escaped joining New York and the nine other states deemed to have lost population.



There is a case for believing that the biggest contribution to mitigating climate change right now is declining fertility around the world. However, Professor Corey Bradshaw of Australia’s Flinders University modelled what would happen if the global fertility rate dropped from 2.4 to 2 tomorrow: the population trajectory would reduce by about 50 per cent by 2100, but we’d only get a 7 per cent decline in total emissions, because most come from developed nations where the rate is already low.



Once again it reveals that civilisation’s survival it is not about the numbers game but depends on society changing its economic structure to one that is in harmony with our environment and which is sustainable. It is not about zero population growth but developing a steady state economy’s zero growth and that can only be accomplished by ending capital accumulation, expanding markets to extract bigger profits. Only socialism can achieve that.







The Wealth Divide

Inequality has reached unprecedented levels, with more than 70% of the global population living in countries where the wealth gap is growing, according to a new UN report.
Rising inequalities are benefiting the wealthiest. Top income tax rates have fallen in all countries, which have made tax systems less progressive. In wealthier countries, the top income-tax rates have dropped from 66% in 1981 to 43% in 2018.



Social and economic disparities have soared even in countries such as Argentina, Brazil and Mexico, where inequality had been falling in recent decades, found the World Social Report.
The income gap has been exacerbated by the climate crisis. The report estimates that the gap between the richest and poorest 10% of the global population is 25% larger than it would be in a world without global warming.



If nothing is done to address the problem, the prosperity and development of millions of people could be damaged.



“If we don’t act now, the entrenched inequalities that are already there will worsen,” said Elliott Harris, chief economist and assistant secretary general for economic development in the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/jan/22/wealth-gap-widening-for-more-than-70-per-cent-of-global-population-researchers-find

Law and Order USA



The United States imprisoning almost twenty-five percent of all people imprisoned in the world, even though we only have 5% of the world’s population,



Mass incarceration is a direct result of changes in policy governing law enforcement and the judicial system such as the war on drugs and mandatory minimums for sentencing. It is also driven by the privatization of prisons. Prison corporations sign contracts with governments that guarantee a certain level of occupancy creating an obligation by the state to incarcerate people.



In the US, police brazenly kill on average more than 1,000 people per year or about three people per day. Black men are three times more likely to be killed by police than white men. Latino men’s risk of being killed by police is about 40 percent higher than the risk faced by white men. Men are 10 times more likely to be killed by police than women. Racial inequality in risk extends across gender.



Many people in heavily-policed communities do not feel safer when they see police in their neighborhoods. Too many feel like the police are an occupying force that gets away with murder. The violence of police leading to the death of civilians has become more widely known and understood as people developed the ability to report them through social media.



 Drug use has been treated as a police issue for many decades, resulting in mass arrests and mass incarceration with a racially disproportionate impact on black and brown communities. Police are not equipped to solve the health and social problems of drug abuse. Legal access to heroin or public injection facilities as well as controlled access to heroin have had dramatic impacts on crime and health.



Rather than continuing to use the same mistaken policies, the US needs a new approach to drug issues. So far eleven states have legalized adult use of marijuana and prosecutors in some cities are no longer prosecuting low-level marijuana offenders. The Atlanta Police Department is disbanding its special Narcotics Unit and reassigning officers to other units to address violent crime.



https://dissidentvoice.org/2020/01/ending-militarization-of-our-communities/



Is your drinking water safe?

The contamination of US drinking water with manmade “forever chemicals” is far worse than previously estimated with some of the highest levels found in Miami, Philadelphia and New Orleans, said a report on Wednesday by an environmental watchdog group.



The chemicals, resistant to breaking down in the environment, are known as perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS. Some have been linked to cancers, liver damage, low birth weight and other health problems.
“It’s nearly impossible to avoid contaminated drinking water from these chemicals,” said David Andrews, a senior scientist at EWG and co-author of the report. “Everyone’s really exposed to a toxic soup of these PFAS chemicals” .



The findings here by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) show the group’s previous estimate in 2018, based on unpublished US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data, that 110 million Americans may be contaminated with PFAS, could be far too low.
The contamination of US drinking water with manmade “forever chemicals” is far worse than previously estimated with some of the highest levels found in Miami, Philadelphia and New Orleans, said a report on Wednesday by an environmental watchdog group.



The chemicals, resistant to breaking down in the environment, are known as perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS. Some have been linked to cancers, liver damage, low birth weight and other health problems.



The findings here by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) show the group’s previous estimate in 2018, based on unpublished US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data, that 110 million Americans may be contaminated with PFAS, could be far too low.


Of tap water samples taken by EWG from 44 sites in 31 states and Washington DC, only one location, Meridian, Mississippi, which relies on 700ft (215m) deep wells, had no detectable PFAS. Only Seattle and Tuscaloosa, Alabama had levels below 1 part per trillion (PPT), the limit EWG recommends. 



In 34 places where EWG’s tests found PFAS, contamination had not been publicly reported by the EPA or state environmental agencies.

The EPA has known since at least 2001 about the problem of PFAS in drinking water but has so far failed to set an enforceable, nationwide legal limit. The EPA said early last year it would begin the process to set limits on two of the chemicals, PFOA and PFOS.

The EPA said it has helped states and communities address PFAS and that it is working to put limits on the two main chemicals but did not give a timeline.

In 2018 a draft report from an office of the US Department of Health and Human Services said the risk level for exposure to the chemicals should be up to 10 times lower than the 70 PPT threshold the EPA recommends. The White House and the EPA had tried to stop the report from being published.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/jan/22/us-drinking-water-contamination-forever-chemicals-pfas

Guatamala’s drought and malnutrition

Rising numbers of children in Guatemala are going hungry as drought linked to climate change reduces food harvests, fueling child malnutrition rates in the Central American nation, the United Nations and charities said. 



Guatemala’s farmers are reeling from a series of prolonged droughts in recent years and from a lengthy heat wave last year as climate change brings drier conditions and erratic rainfall, U.N. officials said. Drought is also adding to the area of Guatemala suffering problems, she said.

“With climate change, the dry corridor has expanded,” Santizo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Jose Aquino, a rural development manager in Guatemala for Mercy Corps, said more rivers in the region are running dry at least part of the year.
“2019 was one of the driest years in Guatemala. Rivers that didn’t used to dry up are now doing so,” Aquino said. “All this basically affects the availability of food,” he said.





Guatemala, which has one of the world’s high rates of child malnutrition, recorded more than 15,300 cases of acute malnutrition in children under 5 last year, up nearly 24% from 2018, according to government figures.



The number of children acutely malnourished was the highest since 2015, when a severe drought hit Central America. 
Children living in poor highland farming communities and along the “Dry Corridor” – running through Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua – are bearing the brunt, they said.
“There is an increase in cases of acute malnutrition that are related to climate change and the long periods of drought from June to October (last year),” said Maria Claudia Santizo, a nutrition specialist at the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF.
Poor harvests of staple crops such as beans and maize mean rural families are forced to eat fewer meals a day, and have less food to sell, according to the World Food Programme (WFP).



Families also are unable to store food to see them through the lean period before the next harvest, the U.N. agency said.



“We are seeing a high rate of child malnutrition that’s rising for two reasons – high temperatures which affect the crops and resulting crop losses, and rains that are more erratic and unpredictable,” said Amy English, a technical advisor at international aid agency Mercy Corps, which works in Guatemala.



She said worsening hunger in the region was a contributor to the caravans of migrants moving north toward Mexico and the United States.
Marc-Andre Prost, a WFP regional nutrition advisor, said three in every five people in Guatemala already live in poverty and rural communities are struggling to cope with the additional burden of extreme weather. According to WFP, about one million people in Guatemala – 15% of the population – “cannot meet their food needs on a daily basis”, and hundreds and thousands rely on food aid.



Climate refugees

The world needs to prepare for millions of people being driven from their homes by the impact of climate change, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said, speaking at the World Economic Forum.



Filippo Grandi said, “We must be prepared for a large surge of people moving against their will,” he said. “I wouldn’t venture to talk about specific numbers, it’s too speculative, but certainly we’re talking about millions here.”





Potential drivers include wildfires like those seen in Australia, rising sea levels affecting low-lying islands, the destruction of crops and livestock in sub-Saharan Africa and floods worldwide, not least in parts of the developed world.

Grandi said European governments needed to think hard about solutions to the migrant crisis.



http://news.trust.org/item/20200121134931-zo65j/

Biopiracy

Is it possible to patent a plant which has been a basic food staple in a country for thousands of years?
Teff, also known as dwarf millet, is to Ethiopia what maize is to Mexico and rice is to China: the country’s most important foodstuff, the basis for the national dish injera — a soft, spongy, pancake-like bread — and an important part of its cultural heritage.



Farmers in the Ethiopian highlands started cultivating teff 3,000 years ago.



Perhaps understandably, many Ethiopians are annoyed that a Dutch company holds a patent on processed teff flour. To this day, in some European countries, no flour from the gluten-free and nutrient-rich super grain may be sold without paying royalties to the Netherlands.
Ethiopians find it particularly perfidious that the Dutch company in question started by conducting research on teff together with the Ethiopian state and agreed to share the genetic information obtained for commercial use. But in 2004, it filed a patent alone.



The European Patent Office granted it a monopoly on a wide range of products made from teff in Europe. This caused consternation in Ethiopia. “People said: What are the Dutch doing? Teff belongs to the Ethiopians, not the Europeans,” recalls Azeb Tadesse-Hahn, cultural editor at DW’s Amharic desk.

In principle, international agreements exclude plants from patenting. But there is a loophole: the upstream and downstream value chain of a plant. “When the plant is processed into a foodstuff, technology is used,” Horn told DW. “If you develop something new and inventive, why not get a patent on it?”



This is how the company argued its case, said Horn. “The patent did not concern a plant, but its processed form, namely flour.” Although it was neither new nor inventive to make flour from teff seeds, the patent was granted anyway for structural reasons. “The examiner in front of his computer has four hours to complete the whole process of searching the databases. And if nothing appears in those databases, then it’s new from his perspective.”



Traditional knowledge and cultural heritage from countries of the global south are seldom available in written form. “And what is not written down often does not exist in the databases and is ignored,” said Horn.
This is biopiracy: the act of marketing plants or other biological material from the global south without sharing the profits with the countries of origin. 
The Dutch teff flour patent is not an isolated case, said Jim Thomas, deputy head of the Canadian non-governmental organization ETC Group, which monitors how new technologies and corporate strategies affect farmers and the environment. “Unfortunately, the patent system has evolved over the past 30 or 40 years in such a way that companies often patent not only technical inventions, but entire species and natural species and their uses,” he said.

Examples are patents on the value-added chains of rooibos tea from South Africa or bean varieties from Mexico and parts of Africa that have been used by the locals for generations. “The development and free exchange of plant varieties over thousands of years is the basis of our agriculture today,” Thomas emphasized. Turning plants into legally protected monopolies will ultimately threaten food security in the global south. 



International agreements such as the Nagoya Protocol try to enable countries in the south to share in the added value created by the use and further development of their native plants. However, new technologies such as DNA sequencing and synthetic biology can now be used to circumvent such agreements, said Jim Thomas. These technologies allow biotech companies to determine and digitize the DNA of plants on site.



“What we are seeing today is large-scale genetic sequencing of as many organisms as possible. The data can then be disseminated via the internet to be reconstructed in laboratories in Germany, China or California,” said Thomas. He has called for a general ban on property rights to living organisms, whether genetically modified or not.

https://www.dw.com/en/ethiopian-teff-the-fight-against-biopiracy/a-52085081

A Housing Crisis???

Housebuilder Berkeley will pay out £1bn to shareholders over the next two years, almost doubling the planned financial award to its investors. Shares rose by 5% on Wednesday to a record high, briefly breaking the £55 mark before retreating to £54.40.



The FTSE 100 company has ridden the booming British property market since the financial crisis, with house prices rising particularly in London and south-east England, its main sources of revenue.



Berkeley said it will distribute about £500m in March through a share issue and buyback, followed by another £500m in March 2021.





Berkeley said it has held back investment in light of the “volatile operating environment” since 2016, the year of the EU referendum. During that time its net cash position has increased from £107.5m to more than £1bn.
It expects to deliver profits of more than £3.3bn over the six years to 30 April 2025. Annual earnings are expected to come in between £500m and £700m.
Founder and chairman, Tony Pidgley’s pay in 2016-17 under the previous remuneration policy he received £29.2m. From 2009 to 2019 he received remuneration worth more than £105m, according to company reports.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jan/22/housebuilder-berkeley-to-pay-out-1bn-to-shareholders

What’s natural?

The idea that humans must live within the natural environmental limits of our planet denies the realities of our entire history. It is ahistorical and unscientific. Humans transform ecosystems to sustain ourselves. This is what we do and have always done. Our planet’s human-carrying capacity emerges from the capabilities of our social systems and our technologies more than from any environmental limits. The conditions that sustain humanity are not natural and never have been.



This has been confirmed by recent research. The impact of humans on nature has been far greater and longer-lasting than we could ever imagine, according to scientists.





We are now negatively impacting the world and the species that live in it more than ever before. But this does not mean that we used to live in true harmony with nature in the past,” said study researcher, Dr Søren Faurby of the University of Gothenburg. “We are extremely successful in monopolising resources today, and our results show that this may have also been the case with our ancestors.”



Co-researcher Alexandre Antonelli of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, said the view that our ancestors had little impact on the animals around them is incorrect, as “the impact of our lineage on nature has been far greater and longer-lasting than we ever could ever imagine”.



https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-51068816