asimovonline | Well, here we are. We have just come through a thirty year period of
mankind's maximum prosperity, on the whole. We've done very well since
World War Two. We have...the world as a whole has eaten better, has
lived better, has had a higher standard of living than it has ever had
before. Now, you might tell me that through this entire thirty years
there have been millions...hundreds of millions of people always hungry,
always starving, with very little, and I'll say yes; it's been rotten.
My point is that before now, it's always been rotten-ER. And we
haven't really appreciated how temporary this is.
For one thing, we've had ample supplies of food, and part of the reason
for that was that we've had an extremely good spell of weather for the
last thirty years. In fact, there are some people who say that this
last thirty years was the best thirty year spell of weather that we have
had in the last thousand years. Now you may remember cold spells, and
floods, and droughts, and all the rest of this stuff. But there has
been less of it the world over than usual. In addition, just as we've
had this good weather, we've also been applying energy at a far greater
rate than ever before to farm machinery, to irrigation machinery. In
addition, we've been using insecticides and pesticides of various sorts,
to sort of clobber those little beasties and those weeds who think
they're going to get some of our food. And in addition to that we've
also developed new strains of grain, so-called "green revolution", that
grow a lot of protein very fast. And what with all these things put
together, our food supply has been going up.
But now, look what happens.
The very thing that makes it possible for us to use more and more energy
is our industrial technologized world. And another thing that our
industry produces is dust. And the air is dustier now than its ever
been before in human history. Except perhaps very temporarily after a
large volcanic eruption.
This means that the Earth's albedo, the percentage of light from the sun
that it reflects back into space before it hits the ground, has been
going up slightly because dusty air reflects more light than clear air
does. And...well, not very much more, but enough. It has been making
the temperature of the Earth drop since 1940. It's been going down
steadily. Again, not very much. You're probably not aware that the
summers are cold, or that the winters are extraordinarily icy, they're
not. The drop in temperature may be one degree. But it's enough to cut
down on the growing season in the northern climates. It makes the
weather a little bit worse. It sends the storm tracts further south, so
that the Sahara Desert creeps southward, so that the monsoon rains in
India fail a little bit. Just enough so that the harvests aren't as
good as they used to be, and the Earth's reserve supply of food sinks to
it's lowest in recent history.
And just as this is happening...and it's going to continue happening
because the air isn't going to get un-dusty unless we stop our
industrial activity. And if we stop our industrial activity, that's
going to be because we've suffered some complete disaster.
So, the weather isn't going to turn better. The air is going to stay
dusty, and it's going to continue getting a little colder. And at the
same time, it's getting hard to get energy. Energy is much more
expensive than it used to be; oil prices are up. And that means that
fertilizer is more expensive than it used to be. And it turns out that
the green revolution depends on strains of grain that require...yes,
they do what they're supposed to do...but they require a lot of
irrigation; a lot of water, and a lot of fertilizer. And the fertilizer
isn't there. And the irrigation machinery is hard to run now with
expensive oil. And, of course, the pesticides are produced in
high-energy chemical factories; their price goes up. Everything is
combining to cut down on the food supply. And to arrange it so that in
years to come, we may have trouble keeping our present level of food,
let alone increasing it.
Of course you might say: "Well, heck! Mankind got along thirty years
ago, before the good weather spell came, when there were droughts in the
midwest, and dust bowls, and when there was comparatively much less
farm machinery in use, and irrigation machinery, and there was no green
revolution, and we weren't using pesticides...except Paris Green and
other tasty things like that. And when we weren't worrying, we weren't
worrying about all the other means of improving the food supply either,
so we'll go back to what it was then, and we'll live the simple life."
There are always people who think that all we have to do, after all is
abandoned, all this foolish technology that we've made ourselves slave
to, and go back like our ancestors and live close to the soil with the
good things of nature. That would be great if we could do it. If we
could go back to the way it was before World War II, technologically, we
could support all the people that lived on Earth before World War II.
The catch is that in these last thirty years one billion and a half
people have been added to the population of the Earth. And we have been
feeding them largely because of all these things that we have done in
these last thirty years, the good weather, the fertilizers, and the
pesticides, and the irrigation, and the green revolution, and all the
rest of it. If we abandon that, we also have to abandon a billion and a
half people; and there are going to be very few volunteers for the job.
Alas, this goes in general. We are in a situation where we cannot go
back. We cannot abandon technology. We can't say "Well, heck! We'll
go back to the good old fireplace with wooden logs! We don't need this
damned central heating!" There's two things about the fireplace with
those good old natural wooden logs. In the first place, it's a rotten
system for heating the house, which is why everyone switched to first
the coal furnace, and then the oil furnace. They didn't do that because
they hated nature. They didn't do that because they turned their backs
on things that were nice, and just wanted filthy modern stuff, no.
[group quietly chuckles]
The wood fire doesn't work! That's what it doesn't!
And in the second thing, if all of us decide to have wood fires the way
our pioneering ancestors did, we'd better remember that there were maybe
three million of our pioneering ancestors, and there are two hundred
million of us. And there ain't enough wood. And the price will go up
instantly. And there will be a black market. And the forests will be
destroyed.
And the same will be if you substitute for electric lights, candles.
There's something very romantic about studying by candlelight unless you
try it.
[group laughs mildly]
And if you think studying by candlelight is bad, wait until you try to run a television set by candlelight.
[group laughs mildly]
Well then, what are we going to do in the future? Population is still
going up. Population right now is higher than it's ever been in the
world's history; it stands at just under four billion. And the
increase, the rate of increase is higher that it's ever been in world
history; two percent a year. Never been anywhere near that high. Right
now, the world's population is going up by two hundred thousand hungry
mouths every day. By the year 2000, barring catastrophe, the Earth's
population is going to be seven billion. Nobody thinks the Earth's food
supply is going to nearly double by the year 2000. It may be that our
food supply won't go up much at all. There's going to be terrific
amounts of famine. What can we do about it?
Well, throughout the history of life on Earth, there have been periods
where a given species has, for one reason or another, spurted it's
numbers upward temporarily. There's been a surprisingly good supply of
food, the weather has been just right, somehow there have been no
predators...something has happened, and the numbers went up. They
always went down again, and always the same way; by an increase in the
death rate. The large numbers of the species starved when the food ran
short. They fell victim to some disease, when as a result of being on
short rations they were weaker. They made good marks for predators. It
always went down. And the same thing will happen to mankind, we don't
have to worry. The death rate will go up, and we will die off through
violence, through disease, through famine.
The only thing is, must we have our numbers controlled in the same way
that all other species have them controlled? We have something others
don't; we have brains. We can foresee. We can plan. We can see
solutions that are humane. And there is a solution that is humane, and
that is to lower the birth rate.
No species in the history of the Earth has ever voluntarily lowered it's
birth rate in order to control it's population, because they didn't
know what birth rate was, how to control it, that there was a population
problem. We're the only species in the history of the Earth.
There is no need to decide whether to stop the population increase or
not. There is no need to decide whether the population will be lowered
or not. It will, it will!