Overpopulation
- r Underpopulation?
Overpopulation or Underpopulation? Toby Ord Programme on the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Overpopulation or Underpopulation? Toby Ord Programme on the Impacts of Future Technologies Oxford Martin School University of Oxford Introduction Benefits of population Costs of population How things might change Pessimism about
Thomas Malthus, 1798 Paul Ehrlich, 1968
– There may be an imperative to limit population – There may be an imperative to increase it
Made from matter
Each one must be laboriously made Must be laboriously made once Then can be very cheaply copied Benefits one person who desires it Benefits all people who desire it Value is independent of population More valuable with more people
Fundamentally just a pattern
– Novels, poems, films, songs, recipes – Science, inventions, designs – Software – All academic research
– We could get the same amount of these things with more free time – Or we could each get much more of these goods
Made from iron
Made in a smithy Made in a very complex factory Could be made by a small population Requires a huge population to make
Made from a long list of exotic elements and components
– Impossible – Or would have taken many more centuries
– Is it good that you exist (ignoring effects on others)?
– Current British population is 0.06 billion – Entire population who have ever lived in Britain from prehistoric times onward is less than 1 billion – Was there something good about having all of this life and activity that people strived for over the centuries? – Should we blithely give up things of this magnitude?
Henry Sidgwick, 1874 Derek Parfit, 1984
Look at the average wellbeing
Good to add a life if it has greater than average wellbeing Good to add a life if it has positive wellbeing More likely to resist increasing population More likely to advocate increasing population
Sum up everyone’s wellbeing Sidgwick’s preferred theory
Better for some, Worse for none, Bad for none
– Food production – Fresh water – Energy – Atmospheric CO2 – Other natural resources
– But they can reach points of rapidly increasing costs
– If factor X limits us to 10 billion – and factor Y limits us to 15 billion – Then factor X warrants much more of our attention
– We can only just feed the current population, and have little arable land left to expand
– Meat production uses much more land per eater than vegetables, so we could support twice as many people if we ate less meat
– With business as usual, global food shortages may soon occur – With sensible management, they won’t
– Political upheavals – Migration – Regional shortages – Uneven power
– ‘In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.’
– High yield cereals, irrigation, fertilizers, pesticides – Increased wheat yields per hectare by a factor of 3 – Norman Borlaug estimated to have saved > 200 million lives
– Genetic engineering of crops, or new farming methods such as aquaculture may ease food limits – Cheap, clean energy would relax many limits at once – In the long run… colonizing other planets
– Moving more things into the information economy – Developing new complex goods
– Eating less meat – Using less water – Using less CO2 – Using less energy
– The benefits must be weighed against the costs – It is possible to have underpopulation with an imperative to increase our population