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NEGATIVE POPULATION GROWTH
THE NPG FORUM
ENERGY AND POPULATION: Transitional Issues and
Eventual Limits
by Paul J. Werbos (1993?)
This is the ninth in a series of NPG FORUM papers exploring
the idea of optimum population--what would be a desirable
population size for the United States? Without any consensus even
as to whether the population should be larger or smaller, the
country presently creates its demographic future by inadvertence
as it makes decisions on other issues that influence population
change.
The approach we have adopted is the
"foresight"process. We have asked specialists in
various fields to examine the connection between alternative
population futures and the national or social objectives in their
fields of interest. In this issue of the FORUM, Dr. Werbos
examines U.S. energy requirements and the U.S. population size
that would be compatible with a plentiful supply of
environmentally benign energy.
The question does not lend itself to formal proof. There are
too many variables and value judgements. Yet it must be
addressed.
Dr. Werbos is a Program Director at the National Science
Foundation. He was with the Energy Information Administration
(EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) For a decade. He
served on the interagency Task Force on Models and Data convened
to respond to the problems identified in the Global 2000 Report
to the President.
This paper was drafted before the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
Some of the developments presented as contingencies have now
become realities. Any person interested in understanding the long
term implications of that invasion and the subsequent rise in oil
prices would do well to read this essay.
--Lindsey Grant, Editor
Overview
The editors of this series have asked me to address what
appears to be a straightforward set of questions: what U.S.
population size is compatible with the environmental consequences
of energy use? What levels of population would lead to maximum
efficiency in the energy sector, as a guesstimate, in long-term
equilibrium?
Many energy analysts tend to ignore the population question,
or to treat population as a minor background variable in
forecasting twenty years into the future. A few analysts,
following the first report to the Club of Rome, decry all
forms of economic and population growth. Both sides--the
pessimists and the defenders of the status quo--have built
elaborate models and theories to defend their viewpoints, often
based on questionable hidden assumptions. After years of working
through this maze of theories and building a few models myself, I
would make the following personal judgements about energy and
population
(1) The present mix of fuels and energy technologies is not
sustainable in the long-term, even if population were
dramatically reduced. In the long term, fossil fuels will run
out. Even now, our present ways of using energy have led to
unhealthy levels of ozone in almost every American city, to toxic
pollution leaking into ground water and into natural bodies of
water. In the next decade or two, oil imports may return to being
a crisis-level problem, as demand increases and domestic supply
decreases, almost inevitably. Sooner or later, we must also deal
with the problem of greenhouse warming, which is associated with
all realistic uses of fossil fuels.
To meet all the present energy demands, worldwide, plus
economic growth, with conventional nuclear power, would imply an
accumulating problem with nuclear waste, nuclear proliferation,
nuclear material available for terrorists, and nuclear safety
orders of magnitude larger than what we face today.
(2) Once a complete transition to sustainable technologies is
achieved, we could probably sustain a wide range of possible
populations at a reasonable level of efficiency. From an
efficiency viewpoint, populations between SO to 100% of the
present population would probably be ideal, though environmental
quality would probably be better at the lower end of the range.
Populations as low as 25 million or so would probably be a
problem, because it would be difficult to sustain a complex mix
of technologies (even soft technologies) on such a small
engineering base; however, we probably could not sustain a
population much greater than that if we insisted on using only
less expensive, less risky soft technologies. With a high degree
of optimism about the soft technologies, and allowances for peak
load electricity supplied by solar power, one might hope to
sustain a population as large as 60 million or so. For larger
populations, we would probably have to rely mostly on direct
solar technologies, including a certain mix of technologies as
yet unproven. Populations much larger than the present would
begin to present problems, because solar energy would become more
expensive (due to higher land prices) and also because the
concentration of water pollution tends to increase in proportion
to population. If our income per capita were as low as that of
China, we could support a similar population, but in an economy
as rich as ours the population and land supply problems would
become difficult.
(3) Regardless of long-term sustainability, the growth of
population and the composition of this growth in the next two to
three decades is possibly the most serious problem reducing our
chance of a successful transition to sustainable technology. At
first glance, the connection may not be obvious, but it is really
quite strong. Sustainable technologies will take a long time to
bring onto the mass market, and the transition will cost billions
upon billions of dollars. An important part of the cost will
involve research and development which is highly profitable in
the long-term; even so, finding the money in the next five years
will clearly be a problem-- and the next twenty years may not be
radically different from the next five.
In these circumstances, the nation will be well advised to do
whatever it can to slow the present rate of population growth and
the increased energy demand posed by a larger population. Perhaps
more important, it needs to change its investment habits to
accumulate the capital to make the transition away from
petroleum. The biggest obstacle to finding the money--either in
the public or private sector--is the general shortage of capital
associated with a low national savings rate and the federal
budget deficit. We need a skilled and productive labor force.
Neither our immigration policies nor our national social policies
are focused on this goal. We admit immigrants based on kinship
rather than skills. We face rising teenage pregnancy and
continuing differential pregnancy--with the poorest who can least
afford to raise them having the most children. We wrestle with
the costs and results of these problems, rather than trying to
avoid them. The costs are very high, and they divert resources
from the challenges ahead. A national policy preparing us to cope
with those challenges would probably result in immigration and
fertility levels corresponding roughly to the "hard
path" described by Leon Bouvier elsewhere in this series,
and an immediate slowing of population growth.
Finally, it is not obvious that the United States will be able
to make the transition to sustainable technologies in time to
prevent severe, debilitating rises in energy prices and
environmental problems worldwide. Rising energy prices and shifts
in the composition of the labor force can slow down economic
growth, making it ever more difficult to make such a huge
transition, if we wait too long. The solutions and the problems
will both take decades to develop, and no one knows which will
happen first. If demographic problems over the next few decades
result in too much of a delay here, the consequences for our
civilization might well be permanent.
Conclusions
This essay has only touched the surface of some very difficult
and complex issues.
The transition to sustainable sources of energy will require a
whole series of major transformations in the economy, each
costing billions of dollars, each entailing major risks, and
requiring serious attention now. Failure to make a timely or
benign transition would lead to serious problems for national
security, the environment and longerterm economic growth.
Successful transitions would require major government investment
in accelerated R&D, stronger incentives to the private
sector, and trillions of dollars in investments from the private
sector; all three of these will be hard to come by in the coming
years, if the present deficit environment persists. Any
population policy which encourages investment and reduces the
growth in the nonproductive population would have an immediate
impact on the growth of the federal deficit, and help a great
deal in increasing the probability of a successful transition
away from oil. In the long term, the energy sector and the
environment would probably be healthiest if the U.S. population
were somewhere around 50 to 100% of the present level, in my
view. If one were very optimistic about biomass and international
cooperation, and pessimistic about high-tech renewables, then the
optimum would be more like 60 million people.
If the issue of population growth is neglected, then, as the
essay by Bouvier has shown, it may be difficult to avoid a
doubling or even tripling of U.S. population, which would clearly
pose problems for energy and the environment, due to higher land
costs and water pollution.
This article is excerpted from an 8 page NPG Forum piece. Full
copies are available for $1.00 from Negative Population Growth,
Inc., P.O. Box 1206, Teaneck, N.J. 07666-1206. Reprinted with
permission of the author and NPG.
Chronic Shortages of Water Predicted Even in
good years, state won't have enough
By Elliot Diringer Chronicle Staff Writer
San Francisco Chronicle December2. 1993.
Sacramento
The Wilson administration projected yesterday that drought or
no drought, California faces chronic water shortages in coming
decades if it does not move quickly to curb demand and boost
water supply.
The state's top water officials said that by 2020, the dams
and aqueducts that make up the world's most elaborate watermoving
network will fall short of California's needs by as much as 4.2
million acre-feet in a good year and nearly twice that in a
drought.
Even if all ameliorative measures deemed feasible today are
carried out, they said, rising demand will still exceed supply in
most years by up to 3.5 million acre-feet, the amount it takes to
irrigate a million acres of crops or sustain a city of 800,000.
In laying out their projection, Wilson aides walked a thin a
line between sounding the alarm and sounding confident that
crippling water shortages can be averted, despite the political
stalement that has paralyzed state water policy for decades.
"The history of the water wars is replete with failed
attempts ...and the problem is only becoming more complex,"
said Resources Secretary Douglas Wheeler. "There is a
shortfall on the horizon...There are ways to address the
shortfall, but we have to act now to adopt those
strategies."
The Department of Water Resources' gloomy forecast is the
bottom line in a 750-page analysis of water supply and water
demand during the next three decades. By 2020, total demand could
approach 69.4 million acre-feet of water a year, up from 63.7
million acre-feet in 1990. The draft report, the latest in a
series of updates to a landmark 1957 State Water Plan, is the
first exhaustive look at California's water prognosis since
before the drought.
It shows supply rising slightly and demand going up much
faster, driven both by the state's soaring population
growth--from 30 million in 1990 to 49 million in 2020--and
continued pressure to allocate more water to restoring rivers,
wetlands and wildlife.
Reflecting the tremendous uncertainty and disagreement over
how much more water the environment needs, or will get, the
report offers not a firm estimate but a range--from 1 million
acre-feet to 3 million acre-feet a year. The anticipated shortage
for cities and farms would rise or fall depending on what the
number turns out to be.
The outlook may become clearer two weeks from now when the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency plans to propose a sweeping
set of standards that would divert some freshwater flows from
urban and farm use toward protection of the San Francisco Bay and
the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta.
State officials, who have steadfastly challenged the EPA's
authority to step into the long-standing bay-delta debate, said
recent meetings with federal officials have produced an
encouraging dialogue but no breakthroughs.
State's Analysis
The supply-and-demand analysis offers a far more sobering
picture than the original 1957 plan, which was essentially an
engineer's wish list for dams in every corner of the state, and
the five earlier updates, which only hinted at a time when the
supply would run out.
Since the last report in 1987, the state has endured its worst
drought this century. Environmental interests have gained
increasing power over water allocations, and the focus has turned
more and more from building new supply to redistributing what
already exists.
Reflecting those new realities, the latest report is the first
to attempt to estimate environmental needs and the first to
suggest that part of the solution is taking agricultural fields
out of production, starting with lands in the western San Joaquin
Valley that produce selenium-laden runoff.
1993 San Francisco Chronicle. Reprinted by permission.
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