Skip to content

The Overpopulation Project

TOP – Research and Outreach

  • Project
  • Recent Publications
    • Recent Publications
    • TOP Grapher
  • Overpopulation
    • Really? Yes!
    • Solutions
    • Family planning success stories
    • Rewilding success stories
  • Resources
    • Scientific articles/papers
      • Population and Biodiversity Loss
      • Population and Environment
      • Population and Climate Change
      • Family Planning and Environment
      • Current Demographic Trends, and Future Projections
      • Population Ethics
    • Popular Science
    • Books
    • Videos
    • Graphics
    • Population Neglect
    • Population and Religion
    • Organizations Dealing with Overpopulation
    • Population Journals
  • About us
    • Persons involved
    • Contact
  • Blog
  • Support us!
  • English
  • Magyar
  • Svenska
  • Português

Overpopulation?

Do you think overpopulation is a serious issue? Or do you believe the Earth is not really overpopulated? In any case, learn more about overpopulation, and why we should talk about it and act on it!

Please check out our proposed solutions!

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)

Like this:

Like Loading...

Search on our website!

Translate

Recent Blog Posts

  • Immigration restrictions helped lead to Martin Luther King’s success January 19, 2021
  • Rights and responsibilities in population policy January 12, 2021
  • Defending the nation-state January 5, 2021
  • Another productive year at TOP December 29, 2020
  • Do countries consider population growth in their national plans for a sustainable future? A new working paper from TOP December 16, 2020

Blog categories

What we are reading, listening to and watching

Aging Population: Nothing to Fear by The Overpopulation Podcast, with guest Jane O’Sullivan

World Scientists’ Warning of a Climate Emergency by William Ripple

What Gives Overpopulation its Legs? by Karen Shragg

Scientists’ warning to humanity: strategic thinking on development, population, poverty and sustainability by Helen Kopnina et al.

Paul Ehrlich interview on The Population Factor with Phil Cafaro

Gallery of infographics – Learn more about overpopulation and environment

Human total population since 1050
Population projection for 2100 according to UN (medium variant)
United Nations latest population projections till 2100. The variants differ in fertility levels which assumed to be medium, high, low or constant (as of 2010-2015) while the mortality assumed to be "normal"; and in case of no change variant both the fertility and mortality are assumed to be constant as of 2010-2015. (UN WPP2017)
Effective family planning programs
Human population and extinctions of non human species - a coincidende?
The Change of the Global Living Planet Index overt time. It shows, that the size of vertebrate populations (mammal, bird, reptile, fish and amphibian populations) declined of 58% since 1970, in little more than 40 years. It means a frightening, 2% average annual decline. (WWF Living Planet Index, 2016)
Tonnes of CO2 equivalent for one person undertaking each action (Wynes and Nicholas 2017, Environmental Research Letters)
CO2 Levels over time
World population change 1800-2100, the country size shows the share of the population (Source: metrocosm.com)
Wild vertebrate animal population have halved in the period the human population have doubled
The Biodiversity is threatened
Human activity has driven CO2 to levels which threaten the Earth
CO2 total emissions around the World
CO2 emissions per person in different countries
Fertility rates in different countries in 2015
The importance of having fewer children in climate change mitigation: a comparison of the emissions reductions from various individual actions. The height of the bar represents the mean of all studies identified in developed nations, while black lines indicate mean values for selected countries or regions. Source: Wynes and Nicholas (2017): "The climate mitigation gap: education and government recommendations miss the most effective individual actions"
Total fertility rate (TFR, births per woman) represented by counties. (2015) Source: populationpyramid.net
Fertility rates in 1960 and 2015
The rapidly growing human footprint - population, carbon dioxid, tropical forest loss, fertilityer consumption, freshwater use, marine fish capture and transportation (UN 2017)
The current biomass of Earth's land mammals. Source: Smith et al. 2015 - Megafauna in the Earth system
Population growth of countries in annual %, in 2015
Human population projections by the main geographical regions
Total fertility rate (TFR, births per woman) represented by counties, in 2015
Weight of vertebrate land animals and human
Weight of vertebrate land animals
Amount of Earth's renewable resources needed, 2017
Women's education and fertility (number of babies). Source: Source: Barro-Lee Educational Attainment Dataset (2015): PRB Data Sheet 2015
Averting unintended births has the opportunity to provide one more wedge to mitigate climate change. Source: Malcolm Potts and Leah Marsh: THE POPULATION FACTOR: How does it relate to climate change?
Intended and unintended births in USA Source: Malcolm Potts and Leah Marsh: THE POPULATION FACTOR: How does it relate to climate change?
Unmet need for FP Source: Malcolm Potts and Leah Marsh: THE POPULATION FACTOR: How does it relate to climate change?

Read and comment on the TOP blog!

Immigration restrictions helped lead to Martin Luther King's success

By Roy Beck

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
%d bloggers like this: