Sorry, I don't know how to do that....
Maybe you can do it. Here's some numbers:
•Our world population has grown more since 1950 than it has in the pre v i o u s four million years. With these additional people come additional demands on our earth: eighty perc e n t of the original rain forests have been c l e a red or degraded; one-third to one- half of the Eart h ’s land surface has been transformed.
•We lose one or more entire species of animal or plant life every 20 min- u t e s—some 27,000 species a year. This rate and scale of extinction has not o c c u rred in 65 million years.
•C u rre n t l y, 505 million people live in countries with water- s t ress or water- s c a rce conditions. By 2025, almost 48% of the Eart h ’s population–between 2.4 and 3.4 billion people–will be living in a reas of water stress or scarc i t y. This f reshwater shortage could intensify diff i- culties in meeting human consumption levels, and wreak devastating effects on our delicately balanced ecosystems.
•Only 0.3% of the planet’s water is available for human use. Due to
mismanagement, over 40% of the g roundwater in the U.S. is contaminat- ed by industrial, agricultural, and household pollution,making it e x t remely difficult and costly to purify.
•It takes 23 times more water to pro d u c e 1 ton of beef than it does to produce 1 ton of grain. Only about 2.5 billion people could be fed on a diet compara- ble to a developed country diet, in which approximately 35% of calories a re derived from animal sourc e s .
•Americans are only 5% of the world’s population, yet we consume 25% of the world’s re s o u rces. Resulting social and environmental problems re v e r b e r- ate around the world.
•Six million acres of prime farm- l a n d—an area the size of Ve rm o n t —w e re lost in the United States alone between 1982 and 1992. Four of those six million acres were usurped by urban and suburban expansion. The other 2 million acres were lost t h rough erosion caused by defore s t a- tion, unsustainable farming practices, and animal over-grazing.
•While the number of people living in 58 US metropolitan areas rose 80%
between 1950 and 1990, the land cov- e red by those areas expanded 305%.
•One U.S. citizen consumes about 30 times as much as a citizen of India. If e v e ryone on earth lived like the average N o rth American, it would re q u i re four m o re earths to provide all the material and energ y.
•Although the U.S. accounts for less than 5% of the world’s overall popula- tion, we produce 25% of all gre e n- house-gas emissions. In 50 years the U.S. will add 114 million people and Africa an additional 1.2 billion. Yet, it’s expected that the carbon emission for the U.S.’s 114 million will be the same as for Africa’s 1.2 billion.
http://www.populationconnection.org/Com ... 202002.pdf