You may think that reducing the global population will solve such problems, but it wont.
Others disagree. And the following is just a tiny sample of a monstrous amount of information on the problems of overpopulation and the obvious solution. Well, obvious to some us, at least.
HALTING the worldās rocketing population growth is the key to solving global warming ā a solution that has been ignored or overlooked by leading climate change advocates. āGlobal warming is a direct result of human activity,ā Professor Short told The Weekend Australian. "The more people there are, the worse the global warming threat gets.
"So we have got to do everything we can to control human population growthā.
"We havenāt given the women of the world freedom from the tyranny ā and I do mean tyranny ā of unwanted fertilityā.
theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/overpopulation-environment-threat/story-e6frg8y6-1111119059859
Overpopulation is a crucial āglobal problemā recognized by the U.N. According to estimates made in May, the world population in 2050 will be 9.3 billion, with a disproportionate contribution from Africa, which currently has a 2.3% growth rate.
However, according to Joel Cohen, there is a solution to the overpopulation problem that does not involve a coercive āone-childā rule as in China. Increasing female secondary education in developing nations, where birth rates are the highest, has the potential to dramatically decrease population growth by 2050.
Another benefit of increased female education is improved accessibility and understanding of fertility options and health-promoting measures before and during pregnancy.
http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/hghr/online/secondary-education-women/
And there are still 215 million women who do not have access to contraception, an abiding injustice which contributes directly to the 53 million unwanted pregnancies every year and the deaths of 70,000 women every year from illegal abortions and complications in pregnancy.
The total fertility rate for the women of Ethiopia, Uganda, Somalia and Kenya is between 4.6 and 6.5 children per woman of childbearing age. The combined population of these four countries was 40 million in 1960; now itās 167 million. The population of Ethiopia was 23 million in 1960; now itās 83 million.
independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/jonathon-porritt-overpopulation-the-global-crisis-that-dare-not-speak-its-name-2376464.html