Thirty-nine years after the publication of Paul Ehrlich's book The Population Bomb, which predicted imminent disaster caused by population growth, the subject of population control is almost never brought up these days. Though Ehrlich's conclusions were widely derided because of his faulty time horizon, can anyone still claim that there are not simply too many damn people on the earth? Even in the middle of the present greenification of business, commerce, fashion, and architecture, the p-word is almost never mentioned. Why is this? It seems so obvious, and yet in all the discussion of water shortages, carbon emissions, and the fact that untold millions of Chinese will soon buy their first car....the subject just isn't brought up, even by ardent environmentalists. Some kind of mass state of denial?
"China's car debate stands out because its population
is the planet's largest. Across the country, rising incomes and falling
auto prices have led to an explosion in car sales, up 54% in the first
three months of 2006, compared with the year-earlier period. China's
auto market is now the world's second biggest, and the motor-vehicle
industry employs 1.7 million workers.
The shift is happening so quickly that McDonald's Corp. said last week that it expects at least half of its new outlets in China to be drive-throughs.
And the car craze here has just begun. China now has about 25 vehicles
-- and fewer than seven cars -- for every thousand people, roughly the
same level as the U.S. had in 1915. If auto sales continue apace, there
will be more than 130 million vehicles on China's roads by 2020 -- up
from about 33 million today. That could help double China's demand for
crude oil and lead to a sharp increase in greenhouse-gas emissions,
according to estimates by the government and environmental groups." Wall Street Journal Online
Take a look at The Breathing Earth, a website that graphically shows the earth's birth, death, and carbon emission rates, and the fact that, in the ten minutes or so that it took me to compose this post, over 5,000 people have been born.