World Overpopulated: Not Enough Food or Energy & It's Getting Worse

The U.S. Is Lucky; Others Are Not

Barry Dennis
An author in a scientific magazine recently, and studiously, addressed the appearance of falling penguin populations of virtually all penguin species. She rightly noted human competition for food as a result of ever-rapidly-expanding human population as a contributor. It may be worthwhile to note than humans compete for just about every item in the food chain, somewhere on earth. Human overpopulation is, and will be addressed if allowed, by nature's typical solution-species crash or die-off. But, not before perhaps irreparable damage to the earth's ecology and environment through species extermination due to resource demands, including food, resulting from overpopulation.

Many, and count me as one, feel that we should spend as much or more time teaching rational population control methods side-by-side with modern agricultural techniques.

Shoreline population growth is the scariest, because it leads to "first use" of a dwindling food resource, the world's fisheries.

Our own nearsighted political policies regarding food, particular offshore U.S. fisheries, which allow millions of tons of U.S. fishery resources to be caught and exported to other countries makes no sense. The Chesapeake Bay is crashing, and has accelerated it's decline. Offshore New England, and Pacific states are crashing, as well as southern U.S. Atlantic and Pacific coastal stocks. Similar crashes have already occurred in Japan, European North Atlantic, Mediterranean, and Southeast Asia and India.

I am not intending to be politically or ecologically "correct" when I note these problems. I do intend however, to try to encourage all writers, editors and authors to note the effects of human overpopulation when writing about this type of problem, and to encourage solutions-based exploration of this type of discussion.

If world leaders are ever to pay attention to scientific thought regarding overpopulation, it must be presented rationally, and frequently.

In point of fact, we may or may not have reached the "tipping point" in utilization of the world's food and other resources.

But for sure recognizing that 20%+ of the world's population exists on less than minimum standards of daily food allowances, strongly indicates that population control must be combined with providing self-sustaining agricultural production methodology to the areas where continuing food problems occur.

"Feed a man for a day, and he is happy, but hungry again tomorrow. Teach a man to feed himself and he will prosper." (I'm paraphrasing).

There is some point where earth's population and resources could be self-sustaining; we may have passed it, or technology may allow a population base of seven, eight, even twelve billion or more. It is hard to imagine that level of population approaching any reasonable standard of living, given the scarcity of natural and other resources. We would be much better off stabilizing the world's population at today's levels in the developed countries, and supporting proper planning n developing nations for population and resource development that allows raising the standard of living for all.

But even today, the match between resource needs and population is awry. Food resources in particular aren't available to those who need them, except through huge charitable contributions from the U.S. and others. And the process of supporting over-populated areas has continued for two generations, and only promises to grow. Without some sustained effort by the world community to assist those areas in developing food resources, along with population control, so that they may live and prosper, it willcontinue to worsen.

The only recreation for hundreds of millions of the world's poor is sex, and maybe music. Take away the sex, and you better have a lot of musical instruments to offer, or, and here's a novel idea; birth control methods.

Politics aside, birth control and farming assistance combined offer the best approach to addressing this problem. Otherwise, war and disease will step in and do the job for us.

Oh, and after we teach and feed them, we need to show how to develop whatever other categories of mineral and natural resources they may have. A U.N. program of Resource Audits of Lesser and Developing countries might provide a path for sustained improvements in standards of living through careful resource(s) development.

Population control must be at the top of any priority list which attempts to balance the world's resources and the needs of various populations.

Published by Barry Dennis

President/founder of retail, direct marketing, mail order, wholesale, publishing, investment banking, management and marketing consulting, distribution, manufacturing, public relations, marketing, advertisin...  View profile

  • World's present population strains food, energy and other resources.
6.7 BillionWorld Population today; 8 Billion by 2025, 9-10 (or more)Billion by 2040

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.