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'The World Might Actually Run Out of People'
lundi 4 février 2019, 18:21 , par Slashdot
An anonymous reader shares a report: By 2050 there will be 9 billion carbon-burning, plastic-polluting, calorie-consuming people on the planet. By 2100, that number will balloon to 11 billion, pushing society into a Soylent Green scenario. Such dire population predictions aren't the stuff of sci-fi; those numbers come from one of the most trusted world authorities, the United Nations. But what if they're wrong? Not like, off by a rounding error, but like totally, completely goofed?
That's the conclusion Canadian journalist John Ibbitson and political scientist Darrel Bricker come to in their newest book, Empty Planet, due out February 5th. After painstakingly breaking down the numbers for themselves, the pair arrived at a drastically different prediction for the future of the human species. 'In roughly three decades, the global population will begin to decline,' they write. 'Once that decline begins, it will never end.' But Empty Planet is not a book about statistics so much as it is about what's driving the choices people are making during the fastest period of change in human history. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/5fkOcjlxhTI/the-world-might-actually-run-out-of-people
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