by gigacannon » Wed 03 May 2006, 22:18:53
It's one thing to say that 'our' way of life is at an end. It's quite another to say that life itself is at an end.
Britain survived two world Wars, and went from being an Industrial, coal-based nation in 1911 to being a modern, petroleum based nation in 2005 with a population change of approximately 20 million people. Europe has a massive food surplus; there's no chance, I think, that we'll see 'mass starvation' in Britain, or the rest of Europe. If you look at the 'overpopulated' areas of the world, they each tell a different story.
China, with its one child policy, even poorly implemented as I think it is, will have an extremely aged population by the year 2050. Global warming may very well disrupt production of food (i.e. rice, fish), which would possibly lead to mass starvation, particularly among the elderly. On the other hand, with the completion of the Three Gorges Dam, and a deliberate effort to construct electrically-driven transport network, China could well survive the peak oil crash relatively intact. Don't forget that China is still a developing country, so it has the luxury of being able to pick a sustainable economy. This economy must be built, for now, with oil.
India shows some, but not many signs of slowing its birth rate. It's a very dense country, and one which may suffer terriblly because of effects of global warming. If India is to survive the peak oil crash, then it needs to become far more organised; as an undeveloped democracy, it neither has the ability to focus political will to enact massive new sustainable development projects, nor does it have the infrastructure or wealth to go ahead on a massive scale. I don't think that India will survive well.
And what about Africa? Africa is in a terrible state, and shows us important things; lack of an economy and overpopulation in one place does not necessarily mean so elsewhere, and it also shows us what, potentially, the next fifty years might have in store for the rest of us.
So what I'm trying to say is that there is room to consider that whilst changes are needed, and things will probably be worse, it's not going to necessarily spell death for everyone.