David
Attenborough is a highly regarded media figure and respected conservationist
but it does not make him infallible. In fact, Attenborough is wrong on many things but foremost in his arguments that there are too many
people in the World, particularly in Africa.
This article on the progressive website Counterpunch by a Survival International worker explores the myths that surround the claim that Africa is
over-populated.
Taking
just sub-Saharan Africa the region with the highest
fertility, so is the key example,
the
rate of population growth is high (2.7%)
but
the population density
is
actually very low. In fact, in every one hundred km sided square,
there are half a million people in Africa compared to well over four
million in England. So, Africa does not have anything like the
overpopulation problem that England has.
The
rate of population increase drops when standards of living rise.
Individuals have children for many reasons of course but some basic
principles seem to apply, people with high living standards generally
feel more secure and so less reliant on a large family to care for
them in infirmity or old age and they think it less likely that their
children will die in infancy. Whatever the reasons – and
incidentally any idea that African women don’t already know how to
limit fertility is pretty silly and racist – well-off people have
fewer children on average than poor ones. So while it’s true that
the sub-Saharan African population is increasing quickly, it’s into
an area of the world which is much less populated than the Global
North.
How
much do people consume. This is crucial because population only
becomes a problem if it’s higher than a territory can provide for
without wrecking its environment. “Consumption” obviously
includes far more than just what people eat, and perhaps the most
important thing is how much energy is needed to produce their food,
housing, transport and everything else they consume. This isn’t
straightforward.
To take a simple example, someone might drive an
ancient and inefficient car which uses lots of polluting fuel but if
they keep it for decades and never travel very far, they might use
less energy, and produce less pollution, than an electric car which
is frequently traded in for a newer model. The same energy goes on
making a new car as running an old one for several years, and the
energy needed to propel both is very broadly the same, whether the
fuel comes from an onboard tank or is drawn from a power station. Of
course, there are thousands of variables, but the basic point is that
the more people consume, the more impact they have on the
environment. There isn’t a good way to measure this, but to get
some inkling we can turn to the common measure for wealth, Gross
Domestic Product (GDP). To put it simply, people from countries with
a high GDP are likely, as a broad assumption, to consume
comparatively more than those with a low GDP.
In
sub-Saharan Africa, we find that the average American’s GDP is
about forty times higher than that of an average African. So,
Africa’s population is indeed growing quickly, that’s true, but
it’s thinly populated and its consumption per head is extremely
low. Whatever their aspirations, many people there never get on a
plane or travel by private car, they don’t get a new washing
machine or TV every couple of years, they don’t use much
electricity or fossil fuel, and they tend not to throw away vast
amounts of food daily.
The
conclusion must be that if overpopulation is a problem because it
strains the world’s resources, then the first and most efficient
way to address it is not in Africa at all, it’s to reduce
consumption in the North, which currently uses far more than its
share of resources. Secondarily, if rates of population growth
continue to fall when standards of living go up, then the easiest way
of addressing that – inside Africa – would likely be to stop the
massive resource outflow from the continent, and ensure more of its
vast natural wealth remains with and starts fairly benefiting its
natural owners.
In
other words, to address “overpopulation,” the richer countries
must do two things – consume less and stop stealing Africa’s
resources. It suggests that a solution to overpopulation and the
overuse of scarce resources is nothing to do with reducing the number
of Africans, but simply for there to be a more level playing field
between them and those of us in the North who take and consume their
wealth. But as the environmental movement and its anxiety about
overpopulation comes mainly from the same place, the richer
countries, it’s always going to be easier and more satisfying to
pin the blame on too many poor Africans.
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