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      We know how many people the earth can support

      The Journal of Population and Sustainability
      White Horse Press

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          Abstract

          A quarter century after Joel Cohen asked the essential question “How Many People can the Earth Support?”, this article offers an answer, based on new science and geographical analysis, and asserts that we have long ago exceeded our planet’s long term ecological carrying capacity that optimistically can only support 3 billion modern industrialized humans. While agreeing that strategies based on reducing consumption are sorely needed to live within our planet’s carrying capacity, the impending explosion of the global middle class promises to render consumption-only strategies inadequate, in the face of runaway population growth and the accumulation of massive ecological debt. Noting recent studies that project global population to begin to decrease in 2064 after peaking at 9.7B, it is asked why we don’t act now to accelerate this already inevitable trend with enhanced investment in women’s empowerment, education, and access to family planning technologies. This paper calls for a goal of achieving 1.5 total fertility rate (TFR) by 2030 to bend the global population curve, begin relieving the ecological burden humanity has foisted on our planet, and to decrease human population as we approach 2100 to something closer to the long term ecological carrying capacity of our planet.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The Journal of Population and Sustainability
          JP&S
          White Horse Press
          2398-5496
          2398-5488
          December 01 2020
          December 01 2020
          : 5
          : 1
          Article
          10.3197/jps.2020.5.1.77
          b88c331b-9742-445b-8923-ebaf04f37c96
          © 2020

          https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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