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Population growth

Population growth is the increase in the number of people in a population or dispersed group. Actual global human population growth amounts to around 83 million annually, or 1.1% per year.[2] The global population has grown from 1 billion in 1800 to 7.9 billion in 2020.[3] The UN projected population to keep growing, and estimates have put the total population at 8.6 billion by mid-2030, 9.8 billion by mid-2050 and 11.2 billion by 2100.[4] However, some academics outside the UN have increasingly developed human population models that account for additional downward pressures on population growth; in such a scenario population would peak before 2100.[5] Others have challenged many recent population projections as having underestimated population growth.[6]

Absolute increase in global human population per year[1]

The world human population has been growing since the end of the Black Death, around the year 1350.[7] A mix of technological advancement that improved agricultural productivity[8] and sanitation and medical advancement that reduced mortality increased population growth. In some geographies, this has slowed through the process called the demographic transition, where many nations with high standards of living have seen a significant slowing of population growth. This is in direct contrast with less developed contexts, where population growth is still happening.[9] Globally, the rate of population growth has declined from a peak of 2.2% per year in 1963.[10] The global human population is projected to peak during the mid-21st century and decline by 2100.[11]

Population growth alongside increased consumption is a driver of environmental concerns, such as biodiversity loss and climate change,[12][13] due to overexploitation of natural resources for human development.[14] International policy focused on mitigating the impact of human population growth is concentrated in the Sustainable Development Goals which seeks to improve the standard of living globally while reducing the impact of society on the environment while advancing human well-being.[citation needed]

Population[15]
Years
passed
Year Pop.
(billions)
1800 1
127 1927 2
33 1960 3
14 1974 4
13 1987 5
12 1999 6
12 2011 7
11 2022 8
14 2037* 9
18 2055* 10
33 2088* 11
*World Population Prospects 2017
(United Nations Population Division)

History edit

 
World human population estimates from 1800 to 2100, with estimated range of future population after 2020 based on "high" and "low" scenarios. Data from the United Nations projections in 2019.

World population has been rising continuously since the end of the Black Death, around the year 1350.[7] Population began growing rapidly in the Western world during the industrial revolution. The most significant increase in the world's population has been since the 1950s, mainly due to medical advancements[16] and increases in agricultural productivity.[17][18]

Haber process edit

Due to its dramatic impact on the human ability to grow food, the Haber process, named after one of its inventors, the German chemist Fritz Haber, served as the "detonator of the population explosion", enabling the global population to increase from 1.6 billion in 1900 to 7.7 billion by November 2019.[19]

Thomas McKeown hypotheses edit

Some of the reasons for the "Modern Rise of Population"[20] were particularly investigated by the British health scientist Thomas McKeown (1912–1988). In his publications, McKeown challenged four theories about the population growth:

  1. McKeown stated that the growth in Western population, particularly surging in the 19th century, was not so much caused by an increase in fertility, but largely by a decline of mortality particularly of childhood mortality followed by infant mortality,[21][22]
  2. The decline of mortality could largely be attributed to rising standards of living, whereby McKeown put most emphasis on improved nutritional status,
  3. McKeown questioned the effectiveness of public health measures, including sanitary reforms, vaccination and quarantine,[23]
  4. The “McKeown thesis" states that curative medicine measures played little role in mortality decline, not only prior to the mid-20th century[21] but also until well into the 20th century.[24]

Although the McKeown thesis has been heavily disputed, recent studies have confirmed the value of his ideas.[25] His work is pivotal for present day thinking about population growth, birth control, public health and medical care. McKeown had a major influence on many population researchers, such as health economists and Nobel prize winners Robert W. Fogel (1993) and Angus Deaton (2015). The latter considered McKeown as "the founder of social medicine".[26]

Growth rate models edit

The "population growth rate" is the rate at which the number of individuals in a population increases in a given time period, expressed as a fraction of the initial population. Specifically, population growth rate refers to the change in population over a unit time period, often expressed as a percentage of the number of individuals in the population at the beginning of that period. This can be written as the formula, valid for a sufficiently small time interval:

 

A positive growth rate indicates that the population is increasing, while a negative growth rate indicates that the population is decreasing. A growth ratio of zero indicates that there were the same number of individuals at the beginning and end of the period—a growth rate may be zero even when there are significant changes in the birth rates, death rates, immigration rates, and age distribution between the two times.[27]

A related measure is the net reproduction rate. In the absence of migration, a net reproduction rate of more than 1 indicates that the population of females is increasing, while a net reproduction rate less than one (sub-replacement fertility) indicates that the population of females is decreasing.

Most populations do not grow exponentially, rather they follow a logistic model. Once the population has reached its carrying capacity, it will stabilize and the exponential curve will level off towards the carrying capacity, which is usually when a population has depleted most its natural resources.[28] In the world human population, growth may be said to have been following a linear trend throughout the last few decades.[10]

 
The logistic growth of a population

Logistic equation edit

The growth of a population can often be modelled by the logistic equation[29]

 

where

  •   = the population after time t;
  •   = time a population grows;
  •   = the relative growth rate coefficient;
  •   = the carrying capacity of the population; defined by ecologists as the maximum population size that a particular environment can sustain.[28]

As it is a separable differential equation, the population may be solved explicitly, producing a logistic function:

 ,

where   and   is the initial population at time 0.

Population growth rate edit

 
A world map showing global variations in fertility rate per woman according to the CIA World Factbook's 2016 data
 
Estimates of population evolution in different continents between 1950 and 2050 according to the United Nations. The vertical axis is logarithmic and is in millions of people. (2011)
 
World population growth rates between 1950 and 2050

The world population growth rate peaked in 1963 at 2.2% per year and subsequently declined.[10] In 2017, the estimated annual growth rate was 1.1%.[30] The CIA World Factbook gives the world annual birthrate, mortality rate, and growth rate as 1.86%, 0.78%, and 1.08% respectively.[31] The last 100 years have seen a massive fourfold increase in the population, due to medical advances, lower mortality rates, and an increase in agricultural productivity made possible by the Green Revolution.[32]

The annual increase in the number of living humans peaked at 88.0 million in 1989, then slowly declined to 73.9 million in 2003, after which it rose again to 75.2 million in 2006. In 2017, the human population increased by 83 million.[30] Generally, developed nations have seen a decline in their growth rates in recent decades, though annual growth rates remain above 2% in some countries of the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa, and also in South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Latin America.[33]

In some countries the population is declining, especially in Eastern Europe, mainly due to low fertility rates, high death rates and emigration. In Southern Africa, growth is slowing due to the high number of AIDS-related deaths. Some Western Europe countries might also experience population decline.[34] Japan's population began decreasing in 2005.[35]

The United Nations Population Division projects world population to reach 11.2 billion by the end of the 21st century. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects that the global population will peak in 2064 at 9.73 billion and decline to 8.89 billion in 2100. [11] A 2014 study in Science concludes that the global population will reach 11 billion by 2100, with a 70% chance of continued growth into the 22nd century.[36][37] The German Foundation for World Population reported in December 2019 that the global human population grows by 2.6 people every second, and could reach 8 billion by 2023.[38][39]

Growth by country edit

According to United Nations population statistics, the world population grew by 30%, or 1.6 billion humans, between 1990 and 2010.[40] In number of people the increase was highest in India (350 million) and China (196 million). Population growth rate was among highest in the United Arab Emirates (315%) and Qatar (271%).[40]

Growth rates of the world's most populous countries
Rank Country Population Annual Growth (%)
1990 2010 2020 (est.)[41] 1990–2010 2010–2020
World 5,306,425,000 6,895,889,000 7,503,828,180 1.3% 0.8%
1   China 1,139,060,000 1,341,335,000 1,384,688,986 0.8% 0.3%
2   India 873,785,000 1,224,614,000 1,333,000,000 1.7% 0.9%
3   United States 253,339,000 310,384,000 329,256,465 1.0% 0.6%
4   Indonesia 184,346,000 239,871,000 262,787,403 1.3% 0.9%
5   Brazil 149,650,000 194,946,000 208,846,892 1.3% 0.7%
6   Pakistan 111,845,000 173,593,000 207,862,518 2.2% 1.8%
7   Nigeria 97,552,000 158,423,000 203,452,505 2.5% 2.5%
8   Bangladesh 105,256,000 148,692,000 159,453,001 1.7% 0.7%
9   Russia 148,244,000 142,958,000 142,122,776 -0.2% −0.1%
10   Japan 122,251,000 128,057,000 126,168,156 0.2% −0.1%

Many of the world's countries, including many in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and South East Asia, have seen a sharp rise in population since the end of the Cold War. The fear is that high population numbers are putting further strain on natural resources, food supplies, fuel supplies, employment, housing, etc. in some of the less fortunate countries. For example, the population of Chad has ultimately grown from 6,279,921 in 1993 to 10,329,208 in 2009,[42] further straining its resources. Vietnam, Mexico, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, and the DRC are witnessing a similar growth in population.

The following table gives some example countries or territories:

Country/territory Population in Life expectancy
in years (2008)
Total population
growth from 1960s
to 2007–2011
1967 1990 1994 2002 2008
  Eritrea* N/A* N/A* 3,437,000[43] 4,298,269 5,673,520[44] 61[45] 2,236,520
  Ethiopia* 23,457,000*[46] 50,974,000* [47] 54,939,000[43] 67,673,031(2003) 79,221,000[48] 55[45] 55,764,000
  Sudan 14,355,000†[46] 25,204,000† [47] 27,361,000†[43] 38,114,160 (2003)† 42,272,000†[44] 50†[45] 27,917,000
  Chad 3,410,000[46] 5,679,000[47] 6,183,000[43] 9,253,493(2003) 10,329,208 (2009)[42] 47[45] 6,919,205
  Niger 3,546,000[46] 7,732,000[47] 8,846,000[43] 10,790,352 (2001) 15,306,252 (2009)[49] 44[45] 11,760,252
  Nigeria 61,450,000[46] 88,500,000[47] 108,467,000[43] 129,934,911 158,259,000[44] 47[45] 96,809,000
  Mali 4,745,000[46] 8,156,000[47] 10,462,000[43] 11,340,480 14,517,176(2010)[50] 50[45] 9,772,176
  Mauritania 1,050,000[46] 2,025,000 [47] 2,211,000[43] 2,667,859 (2003) 3,291,000 (2009)[42] 54[45] 2,241,000
  Senegal 3,607,000[46] 7,327,000[47] 8,102,000[43] 9,967,215 13,711,597 (2009)[51] 57[45] 10,104,597
  Gambia 343,000[46] 861,000[47] 1,081,000[43] 1,367,124 (2000) 1,705,000[44] 55[45] 1,362,000
  Algeria 11,833,126 [46] 25,012,000[47] 27,325,000 [43] 32,818,500 (2003) 34,895,000[48][52] 74[45] 23,061,874
  The DRC/Zaire 16,353,000[46] 35,562,000[47] 42,552,000[43] 55,225,478 (2003) 70,916,439 [48][53] 54[45] 54,563,439
  Egypt 30,083,419 [46] 53,153,000[47] 58,326,000[43] 70,712,345 (2003) 79,089,650 [48][54] 72[45] 49,006,231
  Réunion
(overseas region of France)
418,000[46] N/A[47] N/A[43] 720,934 (2003) 827,000 (2009) [44] N/A[45] 409,000
  Falkland Islands
(British Overseas Territory)
2,500[46] N/A[47] N/A[43] 2,967 (2003) 3,140(2010)[55] N/A[45] 640
  Chile 8,935,500[46] 13,173,000[47] 13,994,000[43] 15,116,435 17,224,200 (2011) 77[45] 8,288,700
  Colombia 19,191,000[46] 32,987,000[47] 34,520,000[43] 41,088,227 45,925,397 (2010)[56] 73[45] 26,734,397
  Brazil 85,655,000[46] 150,368,000[47] 153,725,000[43] 174,468,575 (2000) 190,732,694 (2010) [57] 72[45] 105,077,694
  Mexico 45,671,000[46] 86,154,000[47] 93,008,000[43] 103,400,165 (2000) 112,322,757 (2010)[58] 76[45] 66,651,757
  Fiji 476,727 (1966)[46] 765,000[47] 771,000[43] 844,330 (2001) 849,000[52] (2010) 70[45] 372,273
  Nauru 6,050 [46] 10,000[47] N/A[43] 12,329 9,322 (2011)[59] N/A[45] 3,272
  Jamaica 1,876,000[46] 2,420,000[47] 2,429,000[43] 2,695,867 (2003) 2,847,232[60](2010) 74[45] 971,232
  Australia 11,540,764 [46] 17,086,000[47] 17,843,000[43] 19,546,792 (2003) 26,853,342[61] (2010) 82[45] 10,066,508
  Albania 1,965,500 (1964)[46] 3,250,000[47] 3,414,000[43] 3,510,484 2,986,952 (July 2010 est.)[42][62] 78[45] 1,021,452
  Poland 31,944,000[46] 38,180,000[47] 38,554,000[43] 38,626,349 (2001) 38,192,000 (2010)[63] 75[45] 6,248,000
  Hungary 10,212,000[46] 10,553,000[47] 10,261,000[43] 10,106,017 9,979,000 (2010)[64] 73[45] -142,000
  Bulgaria 8,226,564 (1965)[46] 8,980,000[47] 8,443,000[43] 7,707,495(2000) 7,351,234 (2011)[65] 73[45] -875,330
  United Kingdom 55,068,000 (1966)[46] 57,411,000[47] 58,091,000[43] 58,789,194 62,008,048 (2010)[66] 79[45] 7,020,048
  Ireland 2,884,002 (1966)[46] 3,503,000[47] 3,571,000[43] 3,840,838 (2000) 4,470,700[67] (2010) 78[45] 1,586,698
  People's Republic of China 720,000,000[46] 1,139,060,000[47] 1,208,841,000[43] 1,286,975,468 (2004) 1,339,724,852 (2010)[68] 73[45] 619,724,852
  Japan 98,274,961 (1965)[46] 123,537,000[47] 124,961,000[43] 127,333,002 127,420,000 (2010)[69] 82[45] 28,123,865
  India# 511,115,000[46] 843,931,000[47] 918,570,000[43] 1,028,610,328 (2001) 1,210,193,422 (2011)[70] 69[45] 699,078,422
  Singapore 1,956,000 (1967)[46] 3,003,000 (1990) [47] 2,930,000 (1994)[43] 4,452,732 (2002) 5,076,700 (2010)[71] 82 (2008)[45] 3,120,700
  Monaco 24,000 (1967)[46] 29,000 (1990) [47] N/A (1994)[43] 31,842 (2000) 35,586[72] (2010) (2008)[45] 11,586
  Greece 8,716,000 (1967)[46] 10,123,000 (1990) [47] 10,426,000 (1994)[43] 10,964,020 (2001)[73] 11,305,118 (2011)[74] N/A (2008)[45] 2,589,118
  Faroe Islands
(Danish dependency)
38,000 (1967)[46] N/A (1990) [47] N/A (1994)[43] 46,345 (2000) 48,917 (2010) [75] N/A (2008)[45] 18,917
  Liechtenstein 20,000 (1967)[46] 29,000 (1990) [47] N/A (1994)[43] 33,307 (2000) 35,789 (2009)[76] (2008)[45] 15,789
  South Korea 29,207,856 (1966)[46] 42,793,000 (1990) [47] 44,453,000 (1994)[43] 48,324,000 (2003) 48,875,000 (2010) [77] (2008)[45] 19,667,144
  North Korea 12,700,000 (1967)[46] 21,773,000 (1990) [47] 23,483,000 (1994)[43] 22,224,195 (2002) 24,051,218 (2010)[78] (2008)[45] 11,351,218
  Brunei 107,200 (1967)[46] 266,000 (1990) [47] 280,000 (1994)[43] 332,844 (2001) 401,890 (2011)[79] 76 (2008)[45] 306,609
  Malaysia 10,671,000 (1967)[46] 17,861,000 (1990) [47] 19,489,000 (1994)[43] 21,793,293 (2002) 27,565,821 (2010)[80] (2008)[45] 16,894,821
  Thailand 32,680,000 (1967)[46] 57,196,000 (1990) [47] 59,396,000 (1994)[43] 60,606,947 (2000)[81] 63,878,267 (2011)[82] (2008)[45] 31,198,267
  Lebanon 2,520,000 (1967)[46] 2,701,000 (1990) [47] 2,915,000 (1994)[43] 3,727,703[83] (2003) 4,224,000[44] (2009) - (2008)[45]
  Syria 5,600,000 (1967)[46] 12,116,000 (1990) [47] 13,844,000 (1994)[43] 17,585,540 (2003) 22,457,763 (2011)[84] -(2008)[45]
  Bahrain 182,00 (1967)[46] 503,000 (1990) [47] 549,000 (1994)[43] 667,238 (2003) 1,234,596[85] (2010) 75 (2008)[45]
  Sri Lanka 11,741,000 (1967)[46] 16,993,000 (1990) [47] 17,685,000 (1994)[43] 19,607,519 (2002) 20,238,000[52] (2009) - (2008)[45]
  Switzerland 6,050,000 (1967)[46] 6.712,000 (1990) [47] 6,994,000 (1994)[43] 7,261,200 (2002) 7,866,500[86] (2010) - (2008)[45]
  Luxembourg 335,000 (1967)[46] 381,000 (1990) [47] 401,000 (1994)[43] 439,539 (2001) 511,840 (2011)[87] - (2008)[45]
  Romania 19,105,056 (1966)[46] 23,200,000 (1990)[47] 22,736,000 (1994)[43] 21,680,974 (2002) 21,466,174[88] (2011) - (2008)[45]
  Niue
(associated state of New Zealand)
1,900 (1966)[46] N/A (1990)[47] N/A (1994)[43] 2,134 (2002) 1,398 (2009)[89] N/A (2008)[45] -502
  Tokelau
(New Zealand territory)
5,194 (1966)[46] N/A (1990)[47] N/A (1994)[43] 1,445 (2001) 1,416 (2009) N/A (2008)[45] -3,778
  Jamaica 1,876,000 (1967)[46] 2,420,000 (1990) [47] 2,429,000 (1994)[43] 2,695,867 (2003) 2,847,232[60] (2010) 74 (2008)[45] 971,232
  Argentina 32,031,000 (1967)[46] 32,322,000 (1990)[47] 34,180,000 (1994)[43] 37,812,817 (2002) 40,091,359 (2010) 74 (2008)[45] 8,060,359
  France 49,890,660 (1967)[46] 56,440,000 (1990)[47] 57,747,000 (1994)[43] 59,551,000 (2001) 63,136,180 (2011)[90] 81 (2008)[45]
  Italy 52,334,000 (1967)[46] 57,662,000 (1990)[47] 57,193,000 (1994)[43] 56,995,744 (2002) 60,605,053[91] (2011) 80 (2008)[45]
  Mauritius 774,000 (1967)[46] 1,075,000 (1990)[47] 1,104,000 (1994)[43] 1,179,137 (2000) 1,288,000 (2009)[52] 75 (2008)[45] 514,000
  Guatemala 4,717,000 (1967)[46] 9,197,000 (1990)[47] 10,322,000 (1994)[43] 12,974,361 (2000) 13,276,517 (2009) 70 (2008)[45] 8,559,517
  Cuba 8,033,000 (1967)[46] 10,609,000 (1990)[47] 10,960,000 (1994)[43] 11,177,743 (2002) 11,239,363 (2009)[92] 77 (2008)[45]
  Barbados 246,000 (1967)[46] 255,000 (1990) [47] 261,000 (1994)[43] 250,012 (2001) 284,589 (2010)[42] 73 (2008)[45] 18,589
  Samoa 131,377 (1967)[46] 164,000 (1990) [47] 164,000 (1994)[43] 178,173 (2003) 179,000 (2009)[44] N/A (2008)[45]
  Sweden 7,765,981 (1967)[46] 8,559,000 (1990) [47] 8,794,000 (1994)[43] 8,920,705 (2002) 9,354,462 (2009) 81 (2008)[45]
  Finland 4,664,000 (1967)[46] 4,986,000 (1990) [47] 5,095,000 (1994)[43] 5,175,783 (2002) 5,374,781 (2010) N/A (2008)[45]
  Portugal 9,440,000 (1967)[46] 10,525,000 (1990)[47] 9,830,000 (1994)[43] 10,355,824 (2001) 10,647,763[93] (2011) N/A (2008)[45]
  Austria 7,323,981 (1967)[46] 7,712,000 (1990) [47] 8,031,000 (1994)[43] 8,032,926 (2001) 8,404,252 (2011) N/A (2008)[45]
  Libya 1,738,000 (1967)[46] 4,545,000 (1990)[47] 5,225,000(1994)[43] 5,499,074 (2002) 6,420,000 (2009)[44] 77 (2008)[45]
  Peru 12,385,000 (1967)[46] 21,550,000 (1990)[47] 23,080,000(1994)[43] 27,949,639 (2002) 29,496,000 (2010) 70 (2008)[45]
  Guinea Bissau 528,000 (1967)[46] 965,000 (1990) [47] 1,050,000 (1994)[43] 1,345,479 (2002) 1,647,000[44] (2009) 48 (2008)[45]
  Angola 5,203,066 (1967)[46] 10,020,000 (1990)[47] 10,674,000 (1994)[43] 10,766,500 (2003) 18,498,000[52][94] (2009) 38 (2008)[45]
  Equatorial Guinea 277,000 (1967)[46] 348,000 (1990)[47] 389,000 (1994)[43] 474,214 (2000) 676,000 (2009)[52] 61 (2008)[45]
  Benin 2,505,000 (1967)[46] 4,736,000 (1990)[47] 5,246,000 (1994)[43] 8,500,500 (2002) 8,791,832 (2009) 59 (2008)[45]
  Laos 2,770,000 (1967)[46] 4,139,000 (1990)[47] 4,742,000 (1994)[43] 5,635,967 (2002) 6,800,000[95] (2011) 56 (2008)[45]
  Nepal 10,500,000 (1967)[46] 18,961,000 (1990)[47] 21,360,000 (1994)[43] 25,284,463 (2002) 29,331,000[52] (2009) - (2008)[45]
  Iran 25,781,090 (1966)[46] 54,608,000 (1990)[47] 59,778,000 (1994)[43] 66,622,704 (2002) 75,330,000 (2010)[96] 71 (2008)[45] 49,548,910
  Canada 20,014,880 (1966)[46] 26,603,000 (1990)[47] 29,248,000(1994)[43] 31,081,900 (2001) 32,623,490 (2011)[97] 81 (2008)[45]
  United States 199,118,000 (1967)[46] 249,995,000 (1990)[47] 260,650,00(1994)[43] 281,421,906 (2000) 308,745,538 (2010)[98] 78 (2008)[45]
  Uganda 7,931,000 (1967)[46] 18,795,000 (1990)[47] 20,621,000 (1994)[43] 24,227,297 (2002) 32,369,558 (2009) 52 (2008)[45]
Notes
* Eritrea left Ethiopia in 1991.
† Split into the nations of Sudan and South Sudan during 2011.
‡ Japan and the Ryukyu Islands merged in 1972.
# India and Sikkim merged in 1975.
Population growth 1990–2012 (%)[99]
Africa 73.3%
Middle East 68.2%
Asia (excl. China) 42.8%
China 19.0%
OECD Americas 27.9%
Non-OECD Americas 36.6%
OECD Europe 11.5%
OECD Asia Oceania 11.1%
Non-OECD Europe and Eurasia -0.8%
 
Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated countries in the world. The capital, Dhaka, bustles around Nilkhet Mor.

Future population edit

 
1. World population growth 1700–2100, 2022 projection

Population projections are attempts to show how the human population statistics might change in the future.[100] These projections are an important input to forecasts of the population's impact on this planet and humanity's future well-being.[101] Models of population growth take trends in human development and apply projections into the future.[102] These models use trend-based-assumptions about how populations will respond to economic, social and technological forces to understand how they will affect fertility and mortality, and thus population growth.[102]

The 2022 projections from the United Nations Population Division (chart #1) show that annual world population growth peaked at 2.3% per year in 1963, has since dropped to 0.9% in 2023, equivalent to about 74 million people each year, and projected that it could drop even further to minus 0.1% by 2100.[103] Based on this, the UN projected that the world population, 8 billion as of 2023, would peak around the year 2086 at about 10.4 billion, and then start a slow decline, assuming a continuing decrease in the global average fertility rate from 2.5 births per woman during the 2015–2020 period to 1.8 by the year 2100, (the medium-variant projection).[104][105]

However, estimates outside of the United Nations have put forward alternative models based on additional downward pressure on fertility (such as successful implementation of education and family planning goals in the UN's Sustainable Development Goals) which could result in peak population during the 2060–2070 period rather than later.[102][106]

According to the UN, of the predicted growth in world population between 2020 and 2050, all of that change will come from less developed countries, and more than half will come from sub-Saharan Africa.[107] Half of the growth will come from just eight countries, five of which are in Africa.[104][105] The UN predicts that the population of sub-Saharan Africa will double by 2050.[107] The Pew Research Center observes that 50% of births in the year 2100 will be in Africa.[108] Other organizations project lower levels of population growth in Africa, based particularly on improvement in women's education and successful implementation of family planning.[109]
 
2. World population prospects, 2022 projection[110]
During the remainder of this century some countries will see population growth, some will see population decline. For example the UN projects that Nigeria will gain about 340 million people, about the present population of the US, to become the 3rd most populous country, and China will lose almost half of its population.[104][105]

Even though the global fertility rate continues to fall, chart #2 shows that because of population momentum the global population will continue to grow, although at a steadily slower rate, until the mid 2080s (the median line).

The main driver of long-term future population growth on this planet is projected to be the continuing evolution of fertility and mortality.[102]
 
Estimated size of human population from 10,000 BCE to 2000 CE
 
The majority of world population growth today is occurring in less developed countries.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Our World in Data. Archived from the original on 28 February 2021. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  2. ^ "World Population Prospects 2017 – Data Booklet (ST/ESA/SER.A/401)" (PDF). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. 2017. p. 3. (PDF) from the original on 7 March 2022. Retrieved 13 April 2022.
  3. ^ "World Population 2017". Retrieved 1 April 2020.
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External links edit

External videos
  Food Production and Population Growth - Daniel Quinn
  • . Website of the United Nations Population Division. Archived from the original on 11 July 2017.
  • "Food Production and Population Growth". Daniel Quinn, Alan D. Thornhill, PhD. Ecofuture. Population and Sustainability Media, Non-fiction.
  • . Website of the United Nations Population Division. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013.
  • "Population Growth and the Food Supply". Population Institute of Canada.
  • . US Census. Archived from the original on 7 July 2010.
  • "Feeding the Ten Billion-Plants and Population Growth". PGR Newsletter FAO-Bioversity L.T. Evans. 2000. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-64685-5. Published in Issue No. 125, page 39 to 40 - (5802) characters

population, growth, increase, number, people, population, dispersed, group, actual, global, human, population, growth, amounts, around, million, annually, year, global, population, grown, from, billion, 1800, billion, 2020, projected, population, keep, growing. Population growth is the increase in the number of people in a population or dispersed group Actual global human population growth amounts to around 83 million annually or 1 1 per year 2 The global population has grown from 1 billion in 1800 to 7 9 billion in 2020 3 The UN projected population to keep growing and estimates have put the total population at 8 6 billion by mid 2030 9 8 billion by mid 2050 and 11 2 billion by 2100 4 However some academics outside the UN have increasingly developed human population models that account for additional downward pressures on population growth in such a scenario population would peak before 2100 5 Others have challenged many recent population projections as having underestimated population growth 6 Absolute increase in global human population per year 1 The world human population has been growing since the end of the Black Death around the year 1350 7 A mix of technological advancement that improved agricultural productivity 8 and sanitation and medical advancement that reduced mortality increased population growth In some geographies this has slowed through the process called the demographic transition where many nations with high standards of living have seen a significant slowing of population growth This is in direct contrast with less developed contexts where population growth is still happening 9 Globally the rate of population growth has declined from a peak of 2 2 per year in 1963 10 The global human population is projected to peak during the mid 21st century and decline by 2100 11 Population growth alongside increased consumption is a driver of environmental concerns such as biodiversity loss and climate change 12 13 due to overexploitation of natural resources for human development 14 International policy focused on mitigating the impact of human population growth is concentrated in the Sustainable Development Goals which seeks to improve the standard of living globally while reducing the impact of society on the environment while advancing human well being citation needed Population 15 Yearspassed Year Pop billions 1800 1 127 1927 2 33 1960 3 14 1974 4 13 1987 5 12 1999 6 12 2011 7 11 2022 8 14 2037 9 18 2055 10 33 2088 11 World Population Prospects 2017 United Nations Population Division Contents 1 History 1 1 Haber process 1 2 Thomas McKeown hypotheses 2 Growth rate models 2 1 Logistic equation 3 Population growth rate 4 Growth by country 5 Future population 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp World human population estimates from 1800 to 2100 with estimated range of future population after 2020 based on high and low scenarios Data from the United Nations projections in 2019 World population has been rising continuously since the end of the Black Death around the year 1350 7 Population began growing rapidly in the Western world during the industrial revolution The most significant increase in the world s population has been since the 1950s mainly due to medical advancements 16 and increases in agricultural productivity 17 18 Haber process edit Main article Haber process Economic and environmental aspects Due to its dramatic impact on the human ability to grow food the Haber process named after one of its inventors the German chemist Fritz Haber served as the detonator of the population explosion enabling the global population to increase from 1 6 billion in 1900 to 7 7 billion by November 2019 19 Thomas McKeown hypotheses edit Some of the reasons for the Modern Rise of Population 20 were particularly investigated by the British health scientist Thomas McKeown 1912 1988 In his publications McKeown challenged four theories about the population growth McKeown stated that the growth in Western population particularly surging in the 19th century was not so much caused by an increase in fertility but largely by a decline of mortality particularly of childhood mortality followed by infant mortality 21 22 The decline of mortality could largely be attributed to rising standards of living whereby McKeown put most emphasis on improved nutritional status McKeown questioned the effectiveness of public health measures including sanitary reforms vaccination and quarantine 23 The McKeown thesis states that curative medicine measures played little role in mortality decline not only prior to the mid 20th century 21 but also until well into the 20th century 24 Although the McKeown thesis has been heavily disputed recent studies have confirmed the value of his ideas 25 His work is pivotal for present day thinking about population growth birth control public health and medical care McKeown had a major influence on many population researchers such as health economists and Nobel prize winners Robert W Fogel 1993 and Angus Deaton 2015 The latter considered McKeown as the founder of social medicine 26 Growth rate models editThe population growth rate is the rate at which the number of individuals in a population increases in a given time period expressed as a fraction of the initial population Specifically population growth rate refers to the change in population over a unit time period often expressed as a percentage of the number of individuals in the population at the beginning of that period This can be written as the formula valid for a sufficiently small time interval P o p u l a t i o n g r o w t h r a t e P t 2 P t 1 P t 1 t 2 t 1 displaystyle Population growth rate frac P t 2 P t 1 P t 1 t 2 t 1 nbsp A positive growth rate indicates that the population is increasing while a negative growth rate indicates that the population is decreasing A growth ratio of zero indicates that there were the same number of individuals at the beginning and end of the period a growth rate may be zero even when there are significant changes in the birth rates death rates immigration rates and age distribution between the two times 27 A related measure is the net reproduction rate In the absence of migration a net reproduction rate of more than 1 indicates that the population of females is increasing while a net reproduction rate less than one sub replacement fertility indicates that the population of females is decreasing Most populations do not grow exponentially rather they follow a logistic model Once the population has reached its carrying capacity it will stabilize and the exponential curve will level off towards the carrying capacity which is usually when a population has depleted most its natural resources 28 In the world human population growth may be said to have been following a linear trend throughout the last few decades 10 nbsp The logistic growth of a population Logistic equation edit The growth of a population can often be modelled by the logistic equation 29 d P d t r P 1 P K displaystyle frac dP dt rP left 1 frac P K right nbsp where P t displaystyle P t nbsp the population after time t t displaystyle t nbsp time a population grows r displaystyle r nbsp the relative growth rate coefficient K displaystyle K nbsp the carrying capacity of the population defined by ecologists as the maximum population size that a particular environment can sustain 28 As it is a separable differential equation the population may be solved explicitly producing a logistic function P t K 1 A e r t displaystyle P t frac K 1 Ae rt nbsp where A K P 0 P 0 displaystyle A frac K P 0 P 0 nbsp and P 0 displaystyle P 0 nbsp is the initial population at time 0 Population growth rate editFurther information Total fertility rate Estimates of historical world population and Population dynamics See also Human overpopulation and Overshoot population nbsp A world map showing global variations in fertility rate per woman according to the CIA World Factbook s 2016 data 7 8 children 6 7 children 5 6 children 4 5 children 3 4 children 2 3 children 1 2 children 0 1 children nbsp Estimates of population evolution in different continents between 1950 and 2050 according to the United Nations The vertical axis is logarithmic and is in millions of people 2011 nbsp World population growth rates between 1950 and 2050 The world population growth rate peaked in 1963 at 2 2 per year and subsequently declined 10 In 2017 the estimated annual growth rate was 1 1 30 The CIA World Factbook gives the world annual birthrate mortality rate and growth rate as 1 86 0 78 and 1 08 respectively 31 The last 100 years have seen a massive fourfold increase in the population due to medical advances lower mortality rates and an increase in agricultural productivity made possible by the Green Revolution 32 The annual increase in the number of living humans peaked at 88 0 million in 1989 then slowly declined to 73 9 million in 2003 after which it rose again to 75 2 million in 2006 In 2017 the human population increased by 83 million 30 Generally developed nations have seen a decline in their growth rates in recent decades though annual growth rates remain above 2 in some countries of the Middle East and Sub Saharan Africa and also in South Asia Southeast Asia and Latin America 33 In some countries the population is declining especially in Eastern Europe mainly due to low fertility rates high death rates and emigration In Southern Africa growth is slowing due to the high number of AIDS related deaths Some Western Europe countries might also experience population decline 34 Japan s population began decreasing in 2005 35 The United Nations Population Division projects world population to reach 11 2 billion by the end of the 21st century The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation projects that the global population will peak in 2064 at 9 73 billion and decline to 8 89 billion in 2100 11 A 2014 study in Science concludes that the global population will reach 11 billion by 2100 with a 70 chance of continued growth into the 22nd century 36 37 The German Foundation for World Population reported in December 2019 that the global human population grows by 2 6 people every second and could reach 8 billion by 2023 38 39 Growth by country editMain article List of countries by population growth rate According to United Nations population statistics the world population grew by 30 or 1 6 billion humans between 1990 and 2010 40 In number of people the increase was highest in India 350 million and China 196 million Population growth rate was among highest in the United Arab Emirates 315 and Qatar 271 40 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Growth rates of the world s most populous countries Rank Country Population Annual Growth 1990 2010 2020 est 41 1990 2010 2010 2020 World 5 306 425 000 6 895 889 000 7 503 828 180 1 3 0 8 1 nbsp China 1 139 060 000 1 341 335 000 1 384 688 986 0 8 0 3 2 nbsp India 873 785 000 1 224 614 000 1 333 000 000 1 7 0 9 3 nbsp United States 253 339 000 310 384 000 329 256 465 1 0 0 6 4 nbsp Indonesia 184 346 000 239 871 000 262 787 403 1 3 0 9 5 nbsp Brazil 149 650 000 194 946 000 208 846 892 1 3 0 7 6 nbsp Pakistan 111 845 000 173 593 000 207 862 518 2 2 1 8 7 nbsp Nigeria 97 552 000 158 423 000 203 452 505 2 5 2 5 8 nbsp Bangladesh 105 256 000 148 692 000 159 453 001 1 7 0 7 9 nbsp Russia 148 244 000 142 958 000 142 122 776 0 2 0 1 10 nbsp Japan 122 251 000 128 057 000 126 168 156 0 2 0 1 Many of the world s countries including many in Sub Saharan Africa the Middle East South Asia and South East Asia have seen a sharp rise in population since the end of the Cold War The fear is that high population numbers are putting further strain on natural resources food supplies fuel supplies employment housing etc in some of the less fortunate countries For example the population of Chad has ultimately grown from 6 279 921 in 1993 to 10 329 208 in 2009 42 further straining its resources Vietnam Mexico Nigeria Egypt Ethiopia and the DRC are witnessing a similar growth in population The following table gives some example countries or territories Country territory Population in Life expectancyin years 2008 Total populationgrowth from 1960sto 2007 2011 1967 1990 1994 2002 2008 nbsp Eritrea N A N A 3 437 000 43 4 298 269 5 673 520 44 61 45 2 236 520 nbsp Ethiopia 23 457 000 46 50 974 000 47 54 939 000 43 67 673 031 2003 79 221 000 48 55 45 55 764 000 nbsp Sudan 14 355 000 46 25 204 000 47 27 361 000 43 38 114 160 2003 42 272 000 44 50 45 27 917 000 nbsp Chad 3 410 000 46 5 679 000 47 6 183 000 43 9 253 493 2003 10 329 208 2009 42 47 45 6 919 205 nbsp Niger 3 546 000 46 7 732 000 47 8 846 000 43 10 790 352 2001 15 306 252 2009 49 44 45 11 760 252 nbsp Nigeria 61 450 000 46 88 500 000 47 108 467 000 43 129 934 911 158 259 000 44 47 45 96 809 000 nbsp Mali 4 745 000 46 8 156 000 47 10 462 000 43 11 340 480 14 517 176 2010 50 50 45 9 772 176 nbsp Mauritania 1 050 000 46 2 025 000 47 2 211 000 43 2 667 859 2003 3 291 000 2009 42 54 45 2 241 000 nbsp Senegal 3 607 000 46 7 327 000 47 8 102 000 43 9 967 215 13 711 597 2009 51 57 45 10 104 597 nbsp Gambia 343 000 46 861 000 47 1 081 000 43 1 367 124 2000 1 705 000 44 55 45 1 362 000 nbsp Algeria 11 833 126 46 25 012 000 47 27 325 000 43 32 818 500 2003 34 895 000 48 52 74 45 23 061 874 nbsp The DRC Zaire 16 353 000 46 35 562 000 47 42 552 000 43 55 225 478 2003 70 916 439 48 53 54 45 54 563 439 nbsp Egypt 30 083 419 46 53 153 000 47 58 326 000 43 70 712 345 2003 79 089 650 48 54 72 45 49 006 231 nbsp Reunion overseas region of France 418 000 46 N A 47 N A 43 720 934 2003 827 000 2009 44 N A 45 409 000 nbsp Falkland Islands British Overseas Territory 2 500 46 N A 47 N A 43 2 967 2003 3 140 2010 55 N A 45 640 nbsp Chile 8 935 500 46 13 173 000 47 13 994 000 43 15 116 435 17 224 200 2011 77 45 8 288 700 nbsp Colombia 19 191 000 46 32 987 000 47 34 520 000 43 41 088 227 45 925 397 2010 56 73 45 26 734 397 nbsp Brazil 85 655 000 46 150 368 000 47 153 725 000 43 174 468 575 2000 190 732 694 2010 57 72 45 105 077 694 nbsp Mexico 45 671 000 46 86 154 000 47 93 008 000 43 103 400 165 2000 112 322 757 2010 58 76 45 66 651 757 nbsp Fiji 476 727 1966 46 765 000 47 771 000 43 844 330 2001 849 000 52 2010 70 45 372 273 nbsp Nauru 6 050 46 10 000 47 N A 43 12 329 9 322 2011 59 N A 45 3 272 nbsp Jamaica 1 876 000 46 2 420 000 47 2 429 000 43 2 695 867 2003 2 847 232 60 2010 74 45 971 232 nbsp Australia 11 540 764 46 17 086 000 47 17 843 000 43 19 546 792 2003 26 853 342 61 2010 82 45 10 066 508 nbsp Albania 1 965 500 1964 46 3 250 000 47 3 414 000 43 3 510 484 2 986 952 July 2010 est 42 62 78 45 1 021 452 nbsp Poland 31 944 000 46 38 180 000 47 38 554 000 43 38 626 349 2001 38 192 000 2010 63 75 45 6 248 000 nbsp Hungary 10 212 000 46 10 553 000 47 10 261 000 43 10 106 017 9 979 000 2010 64 73 45 142 000 nbsp Bulgaria 8 226 564 1965 46 8 980 000 47 8 443 000 43 7 707 495 2000 7 351 234 2011 65 73 45 875 330 nbsp United Kingdom 55 068 000 1966 46 57 411 000 47 58 091 000 43 58 789 194 62 008 048 2010 66 79 45 7 020 048 nbsp Ireland 2 884 002 1966 46 3 503 000 47 3 571 000 43 3 840 838 2000 4 470 700 67 2010 78 45 1 586 698 nbsp People s Republic of China 720 000 000 46 1 139 060 000 47 1 208 841 000 43 1 286 975 468 2004 1 339 724 852 2010 68 73 45 619 724 852 nbsp Japan 98 274 961 1965 46 123 537 000 47 124 961 000 43 127 333 002 127 420 000 2010 69 82 45 28 123 865 nbsp India 511 115 000 46 843 931 000 47 918 570 000 43 1 028 610 328 2001 1 210 193 422 2011 70 69 45 699 078 422 nbsp Singapore 1 956 000 1967 46 3 003 000 1990 47 2 930 000 1994 43 4 452 732 2002 5 076 700 2010 71 82 2008 45 3 120 700 nbsp Monaco 24 000 1967 46 29 000 1990 47 N A 1994 43 31 842 2000 35 586 72 2010 2008 45 11 586 nbsp Greece 8 716 000 1967 46 10 123 000 1990 47 10 426 000 1994 43 10 964 020 2001 73 11 305 118 2011 74 N A 2008 45 2 589 118 nbsp Faroe Islands Danish dependency 38 000 1967 46 N A 1990 47 N A 1994 43 46 345 2000 48 917 2010 75 N A 2008 45 18 917 nbsp Liechtenstein 20 000 1967 46 29 000 1990 47 N A 1994 43 33 307 2000 35 789 2009 76 2008 45 15 789 nbsp South Korea 29 207 856 1966 46 42 793 000 1990 47 44 453 000 1994 43 48 324 000 2003 48 875 000 2010 77 2008 45 19 667 144 nbsp North Korea 12 700 000 1967 46 21 773 000 1990 47 23 483 000 1994 43 22 224 195 2002 24 051 218 2010 78 2008 45 11 351 218 nbsp Brunei 107 200 1967 46 266 000 1990 47 280 000 1994 43 332 844 2001 401 890 2011 79 76 2008 45 306 609 nbsp Malaysia 10 671 000 1967 46 17 861 000 1990 47 19 489 000 1994 43 21 793 293 2002 27 565 821 2010 80 2008 45 16 894 821 nbsp Thailand 32 680 000 1967 46 57 196 000 1990 47 59 396 000 1994 43 60 606 947 2000 81 63 878 267 2011 82 2008 45 31 198 267 nbsp Lebanon 2 520 000 1967 46 2 701 000 1990 47 2 915 000 1994 43 3 727 703 83 2003 4 224 000 44 2009 2008 45 nbsp Syria 5 600 000 1967 46 12 116 000 1990 47 13 844 000 1994 43 17 585 540 2003 22 457 763 2011 84 2008 45 nbsp Bahrain 182 00 1967 46 503 000 1990 47 549 000 1994 43 667 238 2003 1 234 596 85 2010 75 2008 45 nbsp Sri Lanka 11 741 000 1967 46 16 993 000 1990 47 17 685 000 1994 43 19 607 519 2002 20 238 000 52 2009 2008 45 nbsp Switzerland 6 050 000 1967 46 6 712 000 1990 47 6 994 000 1994 43 7 261 200 2002 7 866 500 86 2010 2008 45 nbsp Luxembourg 335 000 1967 46 381 000 1990 47 401 000 1994 43 439 539 2001 511 840 2011 87 2008 45 nbsp Romania 19 105 056 1966 46 23 200 000 1990 47 22 736 000 1994 43 21 680 974 2002 21 466 174 88 2011 2008 45 nbsp Niue associated state of New Zealand 1 900 1966 46 N A 1990 47 N A 1994 43 2 134 2002 1 398 2009 89 N A 2008 45 502 nbsp Tokelau New Zealand territory 5 194 1966 46 N A 1990 47 N A 1994 43 1 445 2001 1 416 2009 N A 2008 45 3 778 nbsp Jamaica 1 876 000 1967 46 2 420 000 1990 47 2 429 000 1994 43 2 695 867 2003 2 847 232 60 2010 74 2008 45 971 232 nbsp Argentina 32 031 000 1967 46 32 322 000 1990 47 34 180 000 1994 43 37 812 817 2002 40 091 359 2010 74 2008 45 8 060 359 nbsp France 49 890 660 1967 46 56 440 000 1990 47 57 747 000 1994 43 59 551 000 2001 63 136 180 2011 90 81 2008 45 nbsp Italy 52 334 000 1967 46 57 662 000 1990 47 57 193 000 1994 43 56 995 744 2002 60 605 053 91 2011 80 2008 45 nbsp Mauritius 774 000 1967 46 1 075 000 1990 47 1 104 000 1994 43 1 179 137 2000 1 288 000 2009 52 75 2008 45 514 000 nbsp Guatemala 4 717 000 1967 46 9 197 000 1990 47 10 322 000 1994 43 12 974 361 2000 13 276 517 2009 70 2008 45 8 559 517 nbsp Cuba 8 033 000 1967 46 10 609 000 1990 47 10 960 000 1994 43 11 177 743 2002 11 239 363 2009 92 77 2008 45 nbsp Barbados 246 000 1967 46 255 000 1990 47 261 000 1994 43 250 012 2001 284 589 2010 42 73 2008 45 18 589 nbsp Samoa 131 377 1967 46 164 000 1990 47 164 000 1994 43 178 173 2003 179 000 2009 44 N A 2008 45 nbsp Sweden 7 765 981 1967 46 8 559 000 1990 47 8 794 000 1994 43 8 920 705 2002 9 354 462 2009 81 2008 45 nbsp Finland 4 664 000 1967 46 4 986 000 1990 47 5 095 000 1994 43 5 175 783 2002 5 374 781 2010 N A 2008 45 nbsp Portugal 9 440 000 1967 46 10 525 000 1990 47 9 830 000 1994 43 10 355 824 2001 10 647 763 93 2011 N A 2008 45 nbsp Austria 7 323 981 1967 46 7 712 000 1990 47 8 031 000 1994 43 8 032 926 2001 8 404 252 2011 N A 2008 45 nbsp Libya 1 738 000 1967 46 4 545 000 1990 47 5 225 000 1994 43 5 499 074 2002 6 420 000 2009 44 77 2008 45 nbsp Peru 12 385 000 1967 46 21 550 000 1990 47 23 080 000 1994 43 27 949 639 2002 29 496 000 2010 70 2008 45 nbsp Guinea Bissau 528 000 1967 46 965 000 1990 47 1 050 000 1994 43 1 345 479 2002 1 647 000 44 2009 48 2008 45 nbsp Angola 5 203 066 1967 46 10 020 000 1990 47 10 674 000 1994 43 10 766 500 2003 18 498 000 52 94 2009 38 2008 45 nbsp Equatorial Guinea 277 000 1967 46 348 000 1990 47 389 000 1994 43 474 214 2000 676 000 2009 52 61 2008 45 nbsp Benin 2 505 000 1967 46 4 736 000 1990 47 5 246 000 1994 43 8 500 500 2002 8 791 832 2009 59 2008 45 nbsp Laos 2 770 000 1967 46 4 139 000 1990 47 4 742 000 1994 43 5 635 967 2002 6 800 000 95 2011 56 2008 45 nbsp Nepal 10 500 000 1967 46 18 961 000 1990 47 21 360 000 1994 43 25 284 463 2002 29 331 000 52 2009 2008 45 nbsp Iran 25 781 090 1966 46 54 608 000 1990 47 59 778 000 1994 43 66 622 704 2002 75 330 000 2010 96 71 2008 45 49 548 910 nbsp Canada 20 014 880 1966 46 26 603 000 1990 47 29 248 000 1994 43 31 081 900 2001 32 623 490 2011 97 81 2008 45 nbsp United States 199 118 000 1967 46 249 995 000 1990 47 260 650 00 1994 43 281 421 906 2000 308 745 538 2010 98 78 2008 45 nbsp Uganda 7 931 000 1967 46 18 795 000 1990 47 20 621 000 1994 43 24 227 297 2002 32 369 558 2009 52 2008 45 Notes Eritrea left Ethiopia in 1991 Split into the nations of Sudan and South Sudan during 2011 Japan and the Ryukyu Islands merged in 1972 India and Sikkim merged in 1975 Population growth 1990 2012 99 Africa 73 3 Middle East 68 2 Asia excl China 42 8 China 19 0 OECD Americas 27 9 Non OECD Americas 36 6 OECD Europe 11 5 OECD Asia Oceania 11 1 Non OECD Europe and Eurasia 0 8 nbsp Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated countries in the world The capital Dhaka bustles around Nilkhet Mor Future population editThis section is an excerpt from Projections of population growth edit nbsp 1 World population growth 1700 2100 2022 projection Population projections are attempts to show how the human population statistics might change in the future 100 These projections are an important input to forecasts of the population s impact on this planet and humanity s future well being 101 Models of population growth take trends in human development and apply projections into the future 102 These models use trend based assumptions about how populations will respond to economic social and technological forces to understand how they will affect fertility and mortality and thus population growth 102 The 2022 projections from the United Nations Population Division chart 1 show that annual world population growth peaked at 2 3 per year in 1963 has since dropped to 0 9 in 2023 equivalent to about 74 million people each year and projected that it could drop even further to minus 0 1 by 2100 103 Based on this the UN projected that the world population 8 billion as of 2023 update would peak around the year 2086 at about 10 4 billion and then start a slow decline assuming a continuing decrease in the global average fertility rate from 2 5 births per woman during the 2015 2020 period to 1 8 by the year 2100 the medium variant projection 104 105 However estimates outside of the United Nations have put forward alternative models based on additional downward pressure on fertility such as successful implementation of education and family planning goals in the UN s Sustainable Development Goals which could result in peak population during the 2060 2070 period rather than later 102 106 According to the UN of the predicted growth in world population between 2020 and 2050 all of that change will come from less developed countries and more than half will come from sub Saharan Africa 107 Half of the growth will come from just eight countries five of which are in Africa 104 105 The UN predicts that the population of sub Saharan Africa will double by 2050 107 The Pew Research Center observes that 50 of births in the year 2100 will be in Africa 108 Other organizations project lower levels of population growth in Africa based particularly on improvement in women s education and successful implementation of family planning 109 nbsp 2 World population prospects 2022 projection 110 During the remainder of this century some countries will see population growth some will see population decline For example the UN projects that Nigeria will gain about 340 million people about the present population of the US to become the 3rd most populous country and China will lose almost half of its population 104 105 Even though the global fertility rate continues to fall chart 2 shows that because of population momentum the global population will continue to grow although at a steadily slower rate until the mid 2080s the median line The main driver of long term future population growth on this planet is projected to be the continuing evolution of fertility and mortality 102 nbsp Estimated size of human population from 10 000 BCE to 2000 CE nbsp The majority of world population growth today is occurring in less developed countries See also editList of countries by population growth rate Demographic history Demographic transition Density dependence Ecological overshoot Epidemiological transition Human population planning Irruptive growth Overshoot population Population decline Population density World population Estimates of historical world population Zero population growthReferences edit Absolute increase in global population per year Our World in Data Archived from the original on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 15 February 2020 World Population Prospects 2017 Data Booklet ST ESA SER A 401 PDF United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs 2017 p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2022 Retrieved 13 April 2022 World Population 2017 Retrieved 1 April 2020 World Population Prospects The 2017 Revision Key Findings and Advance 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2011 Retrieved 22 December 2010 CO2 Emissions from Fuel Combustion Archived 2 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Population 1971 2014 IEA PDF Page 74 marked page 72 Population Projections United States Census Bureau Kaneda Toshiko June 2014 Understanding Population Projections Assumptions Behind the Numbers PDF Population Reference Bureau a b c d Roser Max 2013 05 09 Future Population Growth Our World in Data Roser Max Ritchie Hannah March 18 2023 Two centuries of rapid global population growth will come to an end Our World in Data a b c World Population Prospects 2022 Standard Projections Compact File Estimates tab Total Population as of 1 January thousands column United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2022 a b c World Population Prospects 2022 Standard Projections Compact File Variant tab Total Population as of 1 January thousands column United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2022 Vollset Stein Emil Goren Emily Yuan Chun Wei Cao Jackie Smith Amanda E Hsiao Thomas Bisignano Catherine Azhar Gulrez S Castro Emma Chalek Julian Dolgert Andrew J 2020 10 17 Fertility mortality migration and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100 a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study The Lancet 396 10258 1285 1306 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 20 30677 2 ISSN 0140 6736 PMC 7561721 PMID 32679112 a b Population United Nations Retrieved 1 May 2023 Cilluffo Anthony Ruiz Neil June 17 2019 World s Population is Projected to Nearly Stop Growing by the end of the Century Pew Research Center Kaneda Toshiko Falk Marissa Patierno Kaitlyn March 27 2021 Understanding and Comparing Population Projections in Sub Saharan Africa Population Reference Bureau World Population Prospects 2022 Graphs Profiles United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2022 External links editExternal videos nbsp Food Production and Population Growth Daniel Quinn World Population Prospects Website of the United Nations Population Division Archived from the original on 11 July 2017 Food Production and Population Growth Daniel Quinn Alan D Thornhill PhD Ecofuture Population and Sustainability Media Non fiction Probabilistic Population Projections 2nd Revision Website of the United Nations Population Division Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Population Growth and the Food Supply Population Institute of Canada World population growth and trends 1950 2050 US Census Archived from the original on 7 July 2010 Feeding the Ten Billion Plants and Population Growth PGR Newsletter FAO Bioversity L T Evans 2000 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 64685 5 Published in Issue No 125 page 39 to 40 5802 characters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Population growth amp oldid 1218065076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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