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In 1969, President Nixon issued to Congress a "Message on Population." Referring to the expectation of the time that the U.S. population might exceed 300 million by the year 2000, he said:

This growth will produce serious challenges for our society. I believe that many of our present social problems may be related to the fact that we have had only fifty years in which to accommodate the second hundred million Americans. In fact, since 1945 alone some 90 million babies have been born in this country. We have thus had to accommodate in a very few decades an adjustment to population growth which was once spread over centuries. And now it appears that we will have to provide for a third hundred million Americans in a period of just 30 years.

President's Council on Sustainable Development - Population Issues. Between 1972 and the 1994-95 work of the Population and Consumption Task Force of the PCSD no sustained official conversation about U.S. population growth has taken place. Most citizens- and most government officials-assumed incorrectly that below-replacement fertility automatically means immediate zero population growth and that U.S. population is no longer growing. In contrast, immigration has received considerable attention. Several national commissions have reviewed immigration issues, including illegal immigrants and refugees, and published reports and recommendations. The most recent effort, which was chaired by the late Barbara Jordan, is the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform. Its work is still under way. The U.S. population grows at 0.7% annually when immigration is not taken into account, compared to an average annual growth rate (also without counting immigration) of not more than 0.2% in all of Europe. The U.S. population grows at approximately 1.0% when immigration is taken into account. In 1994, the United States added nearly 2.0 million people to the population from the excess of births over deaths and, it is estimated, at least 1.0 million people from net migration into the country. This scale of growth adds another Connecticut in population each year, and another California each decade. Only a handful of countries, all of them developing, contribute more to their populations annually. President's Concil on Sustainable Development

Can America Sustain a Population of 500 Million -- Or Even a Billion -- by 2100?  Set in 2038, the science fiction book Earth, was written by David Brin in 1990. The story, written before global warming was a well known phenomenon, depicts an overcrowded world of 10 billion people inundated by rising sea levels, with Bangladesh's capital underwater. Holes in the ozone layer make any trip outside life-threatening, and even livestock wear eye covers. Siberia is tropical. The last wildlife is housed in zoo-like "arks," and private cars have been outlawed in favor of bicycles. A glass of pure water costs as much as the monthly rent, and jail time is ordered for anyone throwing away a soda bottle. The 10 billion by 2038 figure predicted by Brin might be just in time, going by U.S. Census Bureau figures. Population activism, tends to focus--laudably--on global growth. But how can a country like the U.S. lecture the world if it's own population is predicted to double to 571 million by 2100, according to the U.S. Census Bureau middle projections (it's high projections say 1 billion). In 1900, when America's doors were wide open to immigration and birth rates were accelerating, there were just 76 million Americans. Today foreign-born Americans consititute a tenth of the population, the highest level since 1930. 40% of New York City residents are foreign-born. The U.S. is the fast-growing industrialized country in the world, growing 1.2% annually. The President's Council on Sustainable Development in 1996 listed moving toward stabilizing U.S. population as one of it's 10 goals. Of the doubling U.S. population, Jay Keller, national field director for Zero Population Growth said, "Such a huge increase could be tremendously damaging. Even with the current population we have a lot of environmental challenges." A doubling would mean a population density of 161.4 people per square mile. While this is only a quarter that of western European countries like England, these countries have surrendered most of their wilderness regions, native forests and unique animal populations. "Some of the European countries have very high population densities, with the consequence that they have to import most of their food and are very dependent on the rest of the world," says Keller. "The United States, by contrast, is still one of the great breadbaskets of the world." In the U.S. 400,000 acres of farmland are lost a year. Under doubling of the population, arable land would go from 400 million acres today to 290 million and the $40 billion the U.S. makes through food exports would be seriously threatened. Keller pointed out that Europe has not only stopped its population growth but actually reversed it. By 2050, Italy's population is expected to shrink from 57 million today to 41 million and Germany's from 82 million now, to 73 million. In the meantime, world population overall grows by 78 million a year, or every three days by the size of the city of San Francisco. 27,000 species of animals and plants are lost annually. According to Peter Ward of Washington University, "Every forest, every valley, every bit of land surface capable of sustaining plant life, as well as much of the plankton in the sea, will have to be turned over to crops if our species is to avert unprecedented global famine." Deforestation at home could reach equally alarming rates. "Imagine every congested, sprawled part of the country right now, then double the number of people," says population activist Roy Beck of Numbers USA. If there were 1 billion Americans living as they do today, Bob Engelman, vice president for research at Population Action International, said " ..Each American generates five tons of the global warming gas carbon dioxide (CO2) each year, so that would mean five billion tons from the U.S. alone, with dire consequences for the climate. There would definitely not be enough water, particularly in places like southern California, Nevada and south Florida. Food security would be a major issue, because urban sprawl would take away much of our remaining prime farmland. Forests could not possibly be stable with that level of population. Major biodiversity would also be lost: 95% of the country's endangered plants are in just three states, California, Florida and Hawaii, which have the highest population growth rates." The environmental impact of the average American is 30 to 50 times that of a citizen in a country like India. The richest fifth of the world's population produces 53% of all carbon dioxide emissions, consumes 80% of the world's natural resources and generates 80% of the pollution and waste. Despite these facts, American media portrays environmental problems--from climate change to urban sprawl, and from species loss to soil erosion--as if they were isolated phenomena, unaffected by factors like rapid population growth. According to Population-Environment Balance: If 92 million households in the U.S. switched three lamps from 75-watt incandescent bulbs to 18-watt compact fluorescents, the savings would amount to 157 billion kilowatt hours over the seven-year lifespan of the bulbs. But in that same seven years, the U.S. would add 20 million new residents, and these additional energy users would soak up another 193 billion kilowatts of electricity in their compact fluorescent lamps. 93% of the United States' increase in energy use since 1970 can be attributed to population growth. By 2050, over 80% of the growth will be attributable to immigrants and their descendants who have settled here since the 1990s, as indicated by Census Bureau figures. 72% were opposed to high immigration in a 1998 Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll. A 1993 Hispanic USA Research Group survey showed that 89% of Hispanic Americans strongly support an immediate moratorium on immigration, and 74% feel fewer immigrants should be allowed and stronger restrictions should be enforced. But business groups still lobby for an open door immigration policy to suppress the high wages that would otherwise be demanded in a full-employment economy, and there is no comparable countervailing pressure. And politicians support high immigration levels for fear of alienating large ethnic voting blocks.

The 1999 U.S. population is 272 million, making it the world's third largest country in terms of population, but only 1/4 of a billion compared with China's and India's combined 2 billion. The US land size is about the size of China.

 The US is unusual among developed nations in that it's natural increase (births vs deaths) is still high (.06%), plus 1/3 of it's growth is due to immigration. Part of the increase is due to lower mortality rates. Life expectancy in the United States has risen from 47 years in 1900 to 77 years today. Infant mortality: 6 per 1,000.

U.S. population is growing by two and a half million a year. Population has grown from 152 million in 1950 to 270 million today, a 78% increase. The projected population in the year 2025 is 333 million. Among industrialized nations, only New Zealand (0.8%) and Australia (0.7%) have higher natural increases.

In the United States, 71% of women use some form of family planning. The U.S. fertility rate, or average number of births per woman, has dropped to 1.96, below replacement rate. The U.S. has a high teenage pregnancy rate compared to other developed countries. 22% of the US population is under age 15.

The negative effects of population growth in the U.S. are felt throughout the entire world, because of our enormous per capita consumption of resources (footprint). This inequitable use of resources, coupled with the total global lack of enough resources, is causing the ethical dilemma of failure to meet the basic needs of more than a quarter of the Earth's present population. Shortage of natural goods will predictably affect weaker members of society, leading to social disorder. Warren Flint, Sustainability Review - August 7, 2000 - Issue 25

Projected Population Growth
in the United States
2000 275,306,000
2010 299,862,000
2020 324,927,000
2030 351,070,000
2040 377,350,000
2050 403,687,000
2060 432,011,000
2070 463,639,000
2080 497,830,000
2090 533,605,000
2100 570,954,000
US Census Bureau -January 13, 2000
The highest projection has 553 million
people in 2050 and 1.2 BILLION in 2100

U.S. Projections

Literacy rate is 97%. GDP: $28,600, TVs: 776 per 1,000

One in four children in the U.S. is born into poverty. There is a 94% enrollment for primary-school-age children, virtually no risk of polio or vitamin A deficiency, and only 1% of children under 5 are underweight.

U.S. citizens consumes a large share of resources. The average per capita consumption of meat is 260 lbs of meat, the world's highest and 40 times the average in Bangladesh.

In the last 200 years, the United States has lost 50% of its wetlands, 90% of its northwestern old-growth forests, and 99 percent of its tall grass prairie. The 1993 Information Please Environmental Almanac, World Resources Institute, p. 159.

The US is losing over 1 million acres of prime farmland per year, due to a phenomonen known as 'urban sprawl'. American Farmland Trust

 -- Population: 270 million     
 -- Kids under 15: 22%  
.       
 Health 
 -- Life expectancy: 73 years for boys, 80 years for girls      
 -- Infant mortality: 6 babies per 1,000        
.       
 Wealth 
 -- GDP: $28,600        
 -- TVs: 776 per 1,000  
.       
 Wisdom 
 -- Literacy: 97%       

US Population Count Census Bureau

More on the United States

1999 United States Data Sheet - Basic demographic indicators by state, growth rate, persons per square mile, infant deaths, age group population, income.


USA at night - sattelite photo


Population

In 1996 the nation reached a record high life expectancy at birth of 76.1 years. The final infant mortality rate for 1996 was an all-time low of 7.3 infant deaths per 1,000 live births. Other records set with the release of the statistics for 1996 was the lowest-ever age-adjusted death rate of 491.6 per 100,000 population. The age-adjusted rate, which eliminates the effects of the aging of the population, is usually considered the best indicator of changes in the death rate over time. National Center for Health Statistics

The United States resident population increased by 2.6 million people, although it's rate of growth was less than 1 percent, between July 1, 1997 and July 1, 1998. The population rose from 267.7 million to 270.3 million. The growth rate is consistent with annual growth rates since 1972, which have stayed between 0.9 percent and 1.1 percent. Population Growth Rate Remains Stable, Census Bureau Reports

The nation's total population is projected to reach 275 million by 2000, a growth of 4.5 percent since 1995, making it the slowest growth period since the 1930s. Population growth is anticipated to be stable, at a slightly lower level, from 2000 to 2025. After 2025, the U.S. would grow more slowly than ever before in its history.
     In the next 10 years, America's 50-something population is projected to expand by 12 million persons, rising from 25.3 million in 1996 to 37.7 million in 2006. This growth would represent more than half the nation's total population increase during the decade.
     "During the next 10 to 15 years, the rate of population growth of the 65 and over population is projected to be slower than at any previous time this century," Census Bureau analyst Gregory Spencer says. However, in the following 20 years, this population group is projected to grow by 76 percent (from 39.4 million in 2010 to 69.4 million in 2030) as baby boomers move into the 65 and over age group. U. S. Census Bureau, March 1996

As Americans prepared to ring in the New Year, the Commerce Department's Census Bureau today projected the January 1, 1999, population of the United States to number 271,645,214, up 2,578,000 (1.0 percent) from New Year's Day, 1998.
     The nation's population is projected to grow less during 1999 (2,316,000) than it did during 1998, primarily because of an expected rise in the number of deaths.
     The New Year's Day 1999 population total represents a 9.2 percent increase over the Census Day (April 1) 1990 total of 248,765,170. U. S. Census Bureau, Dec 1998

Population and Population Changes by U.S. State

U.S. Census Bureau population and historical population growth

In the America of 2100, Less Elbow Room  The U.S. census started yesterday in Alaska. When the world world population growth begins to peak by the end of this century, the latest census projections show the US might have doubled its current size and still be growing. Rising numbers might forestall worker shortages and ease the crises surrounding Medicare and Social Security, but growth would also pressure the environment, exaggerate urban sprawl, and gobble up world food and energy resources. Robert Engelman of Population Action International says "It's important to think about [living with] an entire second United States," what with two cars in traffic for every car now, and solving the puzzle of where twice-the-population is going to live and work. The UN says 61 nations (with about 44% of the world's population) have reached replacement fertility rates (2.1 births per woman). By 2015, this number could grow to 87% and include about 2/3 of the world's population. By 2015, China's popluation will have grown by 18%, France's by only 2%, Italy's by minus 28%, Japan by minus 17%, but the US will have grown 27%, or 49% according the new census projections, Australia by 39% and Canada by 38%. Immigration plays an important role. Nearly 1 million new immigrants a year will be added according to the new census projections. A continued rise in U.S. population could mean paved-over farmland, strained water supplies, and accelerated global warming. Americans put "about 20 to 30 times more carbon in the air than the average resident of a developing country," says Engelman. January 21, 2000 Christian Science Monitor

1974 National Security Study Memo (NSSM) 200
On November 26, 1975, President Gerald R. Ford endorsed the 227 page NSSM 200 report and its recommendations, including that

NSSM (National Security Study Memo) 200, the "Implications of World Population Growth for U. S. Security and Overseas interests."

The Life and Death of NSSM 200 Stephen D. Mumford

KZPG - U.S. Sustainable Population Policy Project USS3P

National Audubon Society Population and Habitat Campaign - National Population Policy

Sierrans for US Population Stabilization


History

Looking Back: a 20th Century Portrait of US
One hundred years ago, the United States had 1/4 of it's current population. The biggest city was Toledo Ohio, not Los Angeles. "To date, the 20th century has to be the most dynamic in our history, and these statistics paint a picture of rapid and massive change," says Census Bureau director Kenneth Prewitt. Today, there are 77 million Americans between the ages of 35 and 54. In 1900, there were only 769,000 married women in the civilian labor force. By 1950, there were 8.6 million. Today, there are 34 million. Today over 60% of married women work outside the home. California has grown - 100 years ago San Diego and San Jose were little more than mission outposts. Today, they - along with L.A. and San Francisco - are among the 15 largest cities. In 1900, New Bedford, Mass; Utica, N.Y.; and Wilkes-Barre, Pa., were among the 75 largest cities in the nation. Today their places have been taken by Sun Belt cities - Mesa,Ariz.; Tampa, Fla.; and Baton Rouge, La. Transportation (and air conditioning) made the rise of the Sun Belt possible. From 1900 to 1999, the number of cars has grown from 8,000 to 130 million. There were 5.7 million farms in the country in 1900, and only 2.2 million farms today. In 1900 Uncle Sam took in only $567 million in tax receipts; the US government took in $1.7 trillion in taxes in 1999. The Christian Science Monitor December 15, 1999


Cities, States, and Regions

Most Populous U.S. Metro Areas.  >From the U.S. Census Bureau: the 10 most populous U.S. metropolitan areas with population figures and percentage increase during the 1990s:

  1. New York (20,124,377), 2.9%  ..
  2. Los Angeles (15,781,273), 8.6%  ..
  3. Chicago-Gary, Ind.-Kenosha, Wis. (8,809,846) 6.9%  ..
  4. Washington-Baltimore (7,285,206), 8.3%  ..
  5. San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose (6,816,047), 8.6%  ..
  6. Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City (5,988,348), 1.6%  ..
  7. Boston-Worcester-Lawrence, Mass. (5,633,060), 3.3%  ..
  8. Detroit-Ann Arbor-Flint, Mich. (5,457,583), 5.2%  ..
  9. Dallas-Fort Worth (4,802,463), 19%  ..
  10. Houston-Galveston-Brazoria, Texas (4,407,579), 18.1%  ..

[Portland] A Growing Problem: Hillsboro Wants Farmland for Housing and Will Take its Case to the State.  Big business and farmers are coming head to head over land use in the fertile Tualatin Valley west of Portland, Oregon. Intel has announced plans to put 7,600 new jobs in this region's already overcrowded town of Hillsboro. More jobs means more people, but the city is running out of room. "We're basically going to come to a screeching halt in terms of home-building activity," predicts Hillsboro's city manager, Tim Erwert. Recent state laws have severely limited the development of farmland, but that won't stop Intel and other high tech firms from pushing forward. Threatening legal action against local farmers who claim that the farmland is too valuable to be covered over with buildings, Intel argues that workers who live far from their jobs snarl the traffic by commuting, which in turn leads to short tempers. The legal suit filed by Intel will go before a state committee by the end of the year. July 21, 2000 The Oregonian jb

Third wave leads Utah to a record in childbirths:  'Natural increase' in 1999 also is new high for the state, according to the Governor's Office of Planning and Budget. The figure includes births minus the number of deaths, not population due to net migration. Utah is experiencing a 1.9% growth rate, bring the current population to 2,121,000 people. The baby boomers children are now having children. Out of an increase of 38,500 last year, 4,800 were due to migration.December 18, 1999 The Deseret (UT) News


Las Vegas Leads U.S. Metropolitan Area Growth   Already saddled with pollution, long lines and jammed roads, Las Vegas' population jumped 55% between 1990 and 1998, its growth spurred by unprecedented hotel-casino construction. Nationwide, the central cities in metropolitan areas averaged 3.5% growth, while the area outside the central cities jumped 12.5% in the 1990s. In the West, central cities averaged 10.6% growth, while the surrounding area averaged 16.2%. In the South growth was 5.3% in the cities and 18.4% outside, while in the Midwest growth declined by 0.3% in central cities while their surrounding areas gained 10.0%, and in the Northeast growth in central cities fell 2.0% while the surrounding areas grew 3.7%. December 17, 1999 AP


Texas is the most polluted state in the union. It is an environmental disaster zone. Last year Houston surpassed Los Angeles as the smoggiest city in the U.S. Texas as a whole had more smog alerts in 1999 than any other state. Texas ranked ahead of all states in the discharge of recognized carcinogens into the air. It leads the nation in the number of factories violating clean-water standards. It leads the nation in the injection of toxic waste into underground wells. And on and on. The Sierra Club, which knows a little something about the environment, summed the matter up as follows: "Texas ranks first in toxic releases to the environment, first in total toxic air emissions from industrial facilities, first in toxic chemical accidents, and first in cancer-causing pollution." Spring 2000 source-???

[Chesapeake] Bay Gets Failing Grade, But Progress Is Cited Despite efforts to restore forest buffers along Chesapeake Bay waterways and to boost shad and pollution-filtering oyster fisheries, progress over the last year has been almost non-existent because of the loss of land to sprawl. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation ratesd the bay 28 on a scale of 100 this year, with 100 representing the Chesapeake's pristine state of health when English explorer John Smith sailed into it in the 1600s. William C. Baker, the foundation president said: "Millions of dollars are being spent to restore wetlands and underwater grasses, yet population growth and its ugly stepchild, sprawl, continue to threaten the bay." 90,000 acres of farmlands and forests a year are paved over, resulting in more pollution that works against efforts to stop the loss of wetlands and decrease pollution. The foundation checks indicators such as oysters, shad, underwater grasses, wetlands, forested buffers, toxics, water clarity, dissolved oxygen, striped bass, open lands, blue crab, phosphorus and nitrogen. Only the shad showed improvement, due to the reopening of the Susquehanna River, feeding into the Chesapeake, to fish migration for the first time since the 1800s. Despite all-out efforts for oyster restoration, the oyster population has not been boosted beyond 2% of its abundance in John Smith's time. Other problems cited are the washing of sediment and other algae-producing nutrients into the bay, and the extremely low levels of underwater grass, which blue crabs need to survive. September 21, 2000 Washington Post

 

Enlarge Breed For America cartoon .. click here
Breed For America ... click to enlarge


Overconsumption

If every person in China ate an extra chicken, the grain needed to rear the birds would be equivalent to the entire grain exports of Canada. America's annual consumption is 800kgs per person, much of it in the form of feed for cattle in a meat-based diet. Dr. Norman Myers

The U.S. per capita carbon dioxide emissions are 20.5 metric tons versus Japan's of only 9 metric tons and Nigeria's 0.8 metric tons. World Population Prospects, The 1998 Revision, United Nations, 1999; 1998-99 World Resources: A Guide to the Global Environment

From the National Wildlife Federation - "A child born today in the United States for instance, will by the age of 75 years produce 52 tons of garbage, consume 10 million gallons of water and use 5 times the energy of a child born in the developing world."
"The United States uses approximately quarter of the world's fossil fuels and is the largest contributor of carbon dioxide, undesirable combustion products, and chlorofluorocarbons, chemicals that contribute to greenhouse warming and attack the Earth's ozone shield."
"The world looks to the United States as a role model. It is hard to ask developing nations to implement environment saving techniques and stabilize their population growth when the U.S. is unwilling to do so."

The average Ecological Footprint of those living in the United States is 27 acres per person. Looking at the ecological footprint of each country on a per capita basis, it appears that if the population of the US could simply reduce its consumption so as to attain an Ecological Footprint of one acre per person (equal to that of the lowest impact country, Bangladesh), we would almost exactly match the earth's carrying capacity today. So in answer to the question: "Can we solve the global ecological crisis by reducing consumption?", the answer is yes! But only if all Americans agree to make catastrophic sacrifices, and only for about a week before population eats up the savings. Mark E. Kelley III, PE

Pet food Americans and Europeans together spend $17 billion a year on pet food, $4 billion more than the estimated yearly additional amount needed to provide everyone in the world with basic health and nutrition. The richest 20% of humanity consume 45% of all meat and fish, use 58% of all energy produced and own 87% of the vehicles. Consumption of fossil fuels has almost doubled since 1950 (and so has population) . United Nations Development Program, 1998
(It's not that our use of food is preventing them from having food, but that we can afford sustainable agriculture and they cannot, they being short on arable land)

An American born in the 1990s will produce in a lifetime approximately one million kilograms (2.2 million lbs.) of atmospheric wastes, 10 million kgs (22 million lbs.) of liquid wastes, and one million kgs (2.2 million lbs.) of solid wastes. An American will consume 700,000 kgs (1.54 million lbs.) of minerals, and 24 billion BTUs of energy -- equivalent to 4000 barrels of oil. In a lifetime, an average American will eat 25,000 kgs (55,000 lbs.) of animal products, provided in part by slaughtering 2000 animals. The US per-capita consumption rate is ten to 100 times that of most of the world's countries. Compared to Indians, Americans (on a per capita basis) produce 27 times as much carbon dioxide, ... and consume 35 times as much energy. The Environmental Impast of U.S. Babies by Charles A. S. Hall, Ph.D., R. Gil Pontius Jr., Lisa Coleman and Jae-Young Ko

  • March 28, 2001 ENN Web Site to Americans: Stop Being Energy 'Airheads'.  Running a large refrigerator and freezer for one year can produce as much pollution as driving a car from Chicago to Las Vegas. Each mile a person travels in an airplane accounts for 1.08 pounds of greenhouse gases. These facts and more are at Airhead.org, a service provided by the Center for Neighborhood Technology. To calculate your energy consumption, all the AirHead system requires is information about electricity bills, driving habits and other energy uses. Plug the information into the calculator and in less than a minute it will spit out how much pollution you create in one month. According to the Alliance to Save Energy, energy use is responsible for 80% of all air pollution and 88% of all greenhouse gas emissions. Many environmentalists say energy consumption is second only to population growth on the list of environmental concerns. [Note: the more people there are, the more impact overconsumption has!!]


    Biodiversity

    Fisher Headed for Extinction in Sierra Nevada.  The fisher, an old-growth forest dwelling carnivore, is headed for extinction. The Forest Service's plan does not provide enough protection to save the fisher from extinction or avoid having the fisher listed as an endangered species. It has been eliminated from the northern and central Sierra, isolating fisher in the southern Sierra from fisher in northern California. This isolation, in combination with a small population size and continued habitat loss, places the southern Sierra population of the fisher in immediate danger of extinction. The fisher is a major predator in the area and may keep rodent populations in check. A relative of the mink and otter, it has a long, slender body with short legs, a long bushy tail, and it runs in a bounding gait, with their front feet leaping forward together, followed by the back feet, and walks on the whole foot, unlike other carnivores. July 19, 2000 Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign 

    Dramatic Island Fox Decline Urges ESA Listing. For 16,000 years the island fox successfully inhabited the Channel Islands offshore Southern California. In the past five years, four of the six island fox populations have declined by 90%. The San Miguel Island fox has dropped from 400 individuals in 1994 to 50 in 1998 to 15 in 1999. Only five of the remaining foxes are males, which means the genetic diversity of the subspecies even under the most optimistic conditions will be severely depleted. Only one San Miguel Island fox remains in the wild. In the same time period, the Santa Rosa Island and Santa Cruz Island fox populations have been reduced to less than 100. In only one year, 1998, the Santa Catalina fox may have declined by up to 90%, the researchers say. The conservation group and the Institute for Wildlife Studies  have filed a formal petition with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to list the four imperiled subspecies as "endangered" under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Canine distemper virus (introduced by domestic dogs), the introduction of habitat-degrading pigs, and the newly begun predation by golden eagles are factors. Recovery efforts require heavy funding. An ESA listing would guarantee that more federal dollars are committed to the fox's survival, which is desperately needed to stave off extinction. MC June 6, 2000 ENN 

    Groups Demand Safe Haven for Sonoran Pronghorn  The fastest land mammal in America may be running out of time, with only 140 of the animals in the United States, says the Defenders of Wildlife and the Sierra Club. A petition has been filed with the Department of the Interior and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, demanding a critical habitat. The animal is found only in the Sonoran Desert in Arizona and the Sonora area of Mexico. The Department of Defense uses the Sonoran Desert for bombing, strafing, ground maneuvers and low-level flights, as part of military training. Grazing and low-flying border patrol heliocopters also threaten the area. December 31, 1999 ENN

    Logging, Recreation Called Biggest Threats to National Forests.  A coalition of over one hundred forest and grassland conservation activists and organizations collaborated to produce the "National Forest Yearbook 1999." "Logging in old growth and roadless areas, ORVs out of control, lack of attention to wildlife needs, and countless other environmental abuses are degrading our national forests," said Randi Spivak of the American Lands Alliance. Responsible are some current projects in national forests, at the initiative of local Forest Service land managers or with their permission." The most pervasive threat was found to be timber sales approved with too little attention to environmental issues. "Many perverse incentives influence local Forest Service decision makers to identify logging as the solution to every problem." The growing threat that off road vehicles, ski resort expansions and privatization are listed right behind logging as threats to national forests. Inappropriate grazing is another threat. An inadequate USFS budget often deprives conservation programs while promoting a timber sale program. The good news is that new road construction has been banned in thousands of acres of roadless National Forest lands. December 21, 1999 ENS

    Seaweed Smothers Marine Life Along Florida Coast.  Caulerpa verticillata, a noxious seaweed, has become spread into new habitat off the coast of southern Florida and is choking the coral reef ecosystem that has flourished there for millions of years. Caulerpa generates toxins, which makes it inedible to the herbivorous fish of the reef. Plants and animals of the reef ecosystem that can't move eventually die. Bioversity is threatened by an ever-expanding monoculture of waving seagrass. Intense use of fertilizers, burning of fossil fuels, and sewage treatment plants have doubled the amount of high-nutrient nitrogen being released into the ecosystem in the last several decades, says Brian LaPointe, a marine ecologist. Algae thrives on high levels of nutrients and use up available oxygen and destroy or drive away other marine life. Reefs need low-nutrient situations. "The Everglades restoration, which is expected to cost about $8 billion, is focused solely on reducing the phosphorus runoff from sugar cane farms." ... "The more phosphorus you remove, the more nitrogen is left and that affects the biogeochemistry of the coastal waters." Also, gases from deep-injection sewage wells (there are many in Florida) are suspected to be migrating upward and being released near the surface of the reefs, which is fertilizing the Caulerpa. June 11, 2000 ENN 


    Sustainability

    How Many Humans Can the Earth Support? Dr. David Pimentel, Cornell University

    Hunger, Homelessness Rising in U.S.  The U.S. Conference of Mayors found that, despite a booming economy, the number of Americans seeking emergency food or shelter rose significantly this year and the trend will likely continue for years to come. In 1999, the demand for emergency food aid grew 18%, and for shelter by 12%. A little over 20% of homeless people have jobs and more than 2/3 of the people seeking emergency food aid are employed. Half of the homeless population in the United States was estimated to be black, 31% white, and 13% Hispanic. December 16, 1999 Reuters


    Land and Agriculture

    The US Needs to Raise Fewer Domestic
    Animals
        Source - Pimental
    Putting Sprawl and Population in Perspective:

    The U.S. has 930 million hectares of land. Of this, only 11% is used for urbanization, industry, and roads, amounting to about 0.4 ha (1 acre) per person. Only 20% of U.S. land is suitable for crops, amounting to 0.7 ha per person. Another 26% is used to pasture livestock. The rest is either forest, dessert or mountaintops.

    Of the 188 million hectares that is suitable for crops, 28 million hectares (0.7%) of that is in reserve, leaving 160 million hectares that is actually in cultivation. Of this, 32 million hectares are growing grains to be exported, 28 million hectares are growing livestock feed grains, 28 million hectares grow domestic food grains, and 72 million hectares grow non-grain foods such as legumes, fruits, and vegetables.

    20% of all food produced domestically is exported, which offsets the large trade imbalance due mainly to oil imports.

    Much of our crop yield increase in the past has been due to application of fossil-energy based fertilizers and pesticides, but this increase has peaked.

    If oil becomes scarcer, crop yield will go down and we will need more farmland.

    Soil erosion, varying from 5% to 65% will eat into our farmland reserves. 100 million ha of farmland have been abandoned due to soil erosion in the last 200 years.

    Water tables are dropping and less water will re-define maximum crop yields and what sort of food we can grow.

    If the current population growth rate continues, the number of people in the U.S. will double by 2060, which will add another 105 million ha in urban area unless sprawling is severely curtailed. Most of this will encroach on already shrinking farmland.

    In addition, each new American will require from .08 ha (China's standard) to .7 ha (U.S. standard) of farmland., which would add up to another 128 million ha of land needed for farmland (which we don't have) if current population growth rates and dietary habits continue.

          sources for the above: David Pimentel, Professor of Agricultural Sciences, Cornell University

    Most types of cultivation are destructive of native plant and animal habitat.

    The U.S. already has the most hungry people of any industrialized nation.



    Food, Land, Population, and the U.S. Economy by David Pimentel Cornell University and Mario Giampietro. "The United States is in a privileged situation compared to other nations in the world: the per capita endowment of natural resources is relatively high because of the relatively low population density. At the same time, the United States is seriously risking loosing this privilege if more attention is not given to the control of population growth (including immigration), the sustainable management of natural resources, and the development of alternative energy sources."

    Hamburger Producing a quarter pound of hamburger requires 100 gallons of water, 1.2 lbs. of feed grain and energy equal to a cup of gasoline, causes the loss of 1.25 lbs. of topsoil and causes greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to a 6-mile drive in a typical U.S. car.
    The average person in the United States consumes 260 lbs. of meat per year, most of it hamburgers. In Bangladesh, the average is 6.5 lbs. UNFPA:

    America's Conservation Efforts Falling Short.
    Releasing a new Department of Agriculture study that shows America's conservation efforts falling short, Secretary Dan Glickman today called for a renewed national commitment to preserving private land. From 1992 to 1997, nearly 16 million acres of agricultural and forest land were developed. We are now losing 3 million acres per year of forest and agricultural land, double what was lost each year from 1982 to 1992. Nearly 2 billion tons of soil is eroding into waterways each year. Despite significant gains in erosion control during the past 15 years, there has been no additional improvement since 1995. Gross wetland losses have increased to 54,000 acres annually on agricultural land (Wetland gains are nearly 30,000 acres.) Tree and forest cover in urban areas is declining at an alarming rate. In the Chesapeake Bay region, for example, tree canopy has declined from 51% cover to 37% in the last 25 years. December 7, 1999 Reuters


    Fossil Fuels

    The Coming Global Oil CrisisWorld petroleum output will peak during the first decade of the next century and will decline rapidly thereafter.

    Only a quarter of Americans know that oil, coal, and wood generate 70% of our energy. Sierra May/June 99

    Spending our Great Inheritance - Then What? Geotimes, July 1998, pages 24-26. By Walter Youngquist. During more than 500 million years, geological processes accumulated a rich bank account for us -- oil. The world is now consuming about 26 billion barrels of oil a year, but in new field discoveries, we are finding less than 6 billion barrels a year. Will suitable alternatives be found?

    The Post-Petroleum Paradigm -- and Population "If the fertilizers, partial irrigation [in part provided by oil energy], and pesticides were withdrawn, corn yields, for example, would drop from 130 bushels per acre to about 30 bushels." - Pimental, 1998.

    BP Amoco World Energy  "In 1998, the United States imported 53 percent of its oil needs. This deficit is growing."


    US Overpopulation Based on Petroleum Dependence.   >From the Fossil Fuels Policy Action Institute web page: "Overpopulation is possible in the U.S. through our seven decades of our petroleum dependence, yet policies assure or assume non-stop growth of consumers, cars, etc.." The group's first major project was Alliance for a Paving Moratorium, which has been expanded to include other sustainable practices, such as organic farming and sail transport. The Alliance's goal is to "halt the tremendous environmental, social and economic damage caused by endless road building." "A paving moratorium would limit the spread of population, redirect investment from suburbs to inner cities, and revitalize our economy. Funds would be freed for mass transportation and to maintain existing roads." The founder of the Institute, Jan Lundberg, said that the US and the world may noticeably start running out of easily produced oil by 2010. His term 'petro-food' refers to petrochemical agriculture, which involves fertilizers and pesticides; petroleum fuels run tractors and other machinery. Trucks transport food to all distribution points (supermarkets, etc.) May 22, 2000 EnergyResources email forum


    Three U.S. states - North Dakota, South Dakota, and Texas - have enough harnessable wind energy to supply national electricity needs.  World Watch State of the World, 2000


    Driving and gasoline consumption are subsidized in many ways:

    1. It costs the Defense Department the equivalent of 50 cents a gallon to protect our oil supply sources in the Persian Gulf. That cost is not included in gasoline prices or taxes at the pump. Property taxes, general sales and income taxes are used to pay for road construction, maintenance and cleaning.
    2. Paved roads and driveways accelerate the runoff of storm water, causing flooding and pollution. The cost of mopping up those problems is paid for out of property taxes and federal grants.
    3. Motor fuel taxes do not cover the cost of traffic regulation, washing down fuel spills or cleaning up after accidents. Nor do they cover the cost of caring for accident victims; that falls to Medicare, Medicaid, or other health insurance programs, all of which have strained budgets.
    Are we willing to apply to traffic congestion what we learned in Economics 101 -- that subsidizing consumption leads to waste and shortages, which is exactly what we have and will continue to have, if pouring pavement is our only answer to congestion? The Detroit Free Press July 27, 1999

    More on Sustainability, Oil, and Soil - here



    Water

    The average American uses 70 gallons a day. Water conservation is always appropriate, drought or no drought. There's a cost to every drop of water that you use. Water that runs in our bathtubs and kitchen sinks must be treated before being put back into waterways. Every gallon of treated wastewater has a price tag. River water that flows past water intakes and on down to the sea is not wasted: It sustains aquatic life. Heating water for domestic use requires energy. Water not used is energy not consumed and wastewater not produced. The Washington Post August 29, 1999

    American Rivers: Damning the Dams  Dams on many North American rivers are causing native freshwater species, including several varieties of fish, mussels, crayfish, frogs, and snails, to go extinct as fast as those living in tropical rainforests. In a study entitled "America's Most Endangered Rivers of 2000" by conservation group American Rivers, 13 American rivers face serious immediate environmental threats, 8 of which are on the list due to dams. Washington's lower Snake River tops the list for the second year, being cited again due to four dams on the river operated by the Army Corps of Engineers. These dams have transformed the once free flowing river into a series of slackwater ponds, thereby bringing salmon and steelhead to the brink of extinction. Rebecca Wodder, president of American Rivers, says, "We have blocked the flows, straightened the curves and hardened the banks of thousands of miles of waterways. By changing the most fundamental qualities of rivers--their natural shapes and flows--we've made it difficult for them to support life." The National Hydropower Association claims that hydropower dams produce pollution-free power while enhancing biodiversity and improving habitat. However, Anthony Ricciardi, a freshwater biologist at Canada's Dalhousie University, is unimpressed with this assertion, citing that dams pose a major problem for the ecological health of rivers, and contribute to other problems. "We also have to look at water quality, organic and chemical pollution and runoff from streets and yards," he says. "The invasion of exotic species--the zebra mussel for example--is also something that has to be addressed." Ricciardi also points out that if current trend in river and wildlife destruction continue, more species will be lost in the next 100 years then during the past century. July 1, 2000 eMagazine jb


    Pillar of Sand: Can the Irrigation Miracle Last? World Watch Institute July 1999 Overpumping is sucking out too much of the world's underground fresh water, with a stable world food supply now dependent on an increasing global water deficit. 40 percent of the world's food comes from irrigated cropland. But the productivity of irrigation is in jeopardy from the overpumping of groundwater, the growing diversion of irrigation water to cities, and the buildup of salts in the soil. The amount of irrigated land per person is shrinking. Many major rivers now run dry for large portions of the year-including the Yellow in China, the Indus in Pakistan, the Ganges in South Asia, and the Colorado in the American Southwest. The biggest known losses are in India, China, the United States, North Africa and Saudi Arabia. The lost water would be enough to grow 10% of world grain. To meet their food needs, these countries that are low on water are importing grain. Irrigation's heavy water demands are also damaging the health of the aquatic environment-shrinking wetlands, reducing fish populations, and pushing species toward extinction.
        Farmers in California's Imperial Valley are lining canals, recycling farm runoff and selling the saved water to southern California cities.

    As Atlanta Grows, Water Evaporates in Wilting Drought.  The Gulf Coast of Florida is experiencing the driest spring in a century. The National Drought Monitor lists the crescent from Tampa to New Orleans as experiencing extreme drought. West Texas and northwest Missouri, as well as parts of the West and Midwest have experienced a similar lack of rain. Yet the Atlanta region is adding nearly 100,000 people a year, more than a million people in those 14 years, most of the growth in suburban areas, where the lawns need watering, swimming pools need filling, air-conditioning demands high reservoir levels for hydroelectric, and people like to take numerous showers. Cotton and peanut farmers in the south are impacted, having to irrigate earlier this year than ever. Water tables are falling, and ponds aren't filling. Some parts of Georgia have received less rain in the last 25 months than at any time in recorded weather history. The regional climate is changing in a profound way, moving from many years of stability with predictable rainfall to a far more variable climate that will veer between years of plenty and years of scarcity, says Dr. David E. Stooksbury, the state climatologist. Watering restrictions are in effect and are likely to be tightened as the drought goes on. Similar water restrictions involving 26 cities and counties were applied during the 1986 drought. Lawns went brown and trees toppled. The state is seriously considering a total watering ban in the northern region if the drought continues. The Atlanta Regional Commission says the demand for water is expected to increase by 50% by 2020, which will never be met without a 10% cutback in water use. June 15, 2000 NY Times 

    Agriculture and Water Quality Economic Research Service The most recent Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Water Quality Inventory (1995), based on assessments by the States, reports that 1/3 of rivers, lakes (excluding the Great Lakes), and estuaries do not fully support a healthy aquatic community or human activities all year round. Agriculture is the leading source of impairment for rivers (affecting 60% of impaired river miles), lakes (50% of impaired lake acres), and the third source of impairment for estuaries (34% of impaired estuary acres), and the leading source of impairment of wetland water quality. Of 49 States reporting sources of groundwater contamination, agriculture was cited as a source in 44. The Great Lakes continue to suffer serious pollution, but agriculture is not one of the leading sources. Soil erosion due to tilling of the soil, addition of nutrients (fertilizers) to the soil, and salination due to irrigation are causes of water impairment due to agriculture.


    Pollution and Global Warming

    The United States is responsible for 22% of the world's industrial carbon dioxide emissions, a leading cause of global warming Stabilizing the Atmosphere, Population Action International, p. 33

    Bush Makes Mistake on CO2.  Contrary to campaign promises, on March 13, 2001 President Bush said his administration would not seek to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. Scientists say that carbon dioxide is a key contributor to global warming. Worldwatch President Christopher Flavin said that "the U.S. is missing an opportunity to exert forceful leadership on one of the most serious environmental threats facing humanity in the 21st century. .. Constraining U.S. emissions is essential if the world is to avoid climate change. The U.S. accounts for one-quarter of global CO2 emissions, but more remarkably, accounts for nearly half of the increase in emissions between 1990 and 2000--exceeding the combined emissions growth of all of China, India, Africa, and Latin America. ... It is remarkable that in the past few years, as China's coal-burning has declined sharply, U.S. coal combustion is rising. In the last two years, we have passed China to be the world's number one coal burner. ... Outside the United States, many countries are moving rapidly to pursue a new generation of 21st century energy technologies such as fuel cells, wind turbines, and solar electric generators. The attempt by the Bush administration to return to reliance on coal, a dirty fuel that is a relic of the 19th century would be a costly economic mistake." March 14, 2001 World Watch

    Washington will Miss Greenhouse Target.  The United States has admitted that it can not, and perhaps will not, reach the greenhouse gas reduction target accepted at the 1998 Kyoto climate conference. In a recent statement by American under-secretary of global affairs Frank Loy the US confirmed that unless Europe gives way and allows the US to purchase "carbon credits" the country, which produces 25% of the world's carbon dioxide emissions, will not meet its obligations. According to the Kyoto conference, signing countries agreed that they would cut their greenhouse gas emissions by 7% before 2010. Loy cites that the growing economy in the US prevents reduction in carbon dioxide emissions, and instead wants to excuse American discrepancies by purchasing credits from nations who produce less than this projected amount of carbon dioxide. Tony Juniper of Friends of the Earth responded to this attitude saying, "The US is doing tricks with arithmetic rather than deal[ing] with some of the fundamental problems of profligate use of fossil fuels." Loy did admit, however, that there was growing concern in the US over pollution and global warming. Citing a recent announcement from NASA that a warmer earth is eroding more than 50 billion tons of water a year from the Greenland ice sheet, he confirmed that the American government was dedicated to attempting greenhouse gas reductions. Such statistics, however, feed into the increasing concern that melting ice sheets will have devastating effects on the earth's climate. Research suggests that over the past one hundred years, the sea level has risen about 23 cm, covering once dry low elevation levels. July 22, 2000 London Guardian jb

    Indiana among Top States in Generating Pollution Caused by Rise in Coal-fired Power Generation.
    Increased electricity generation by coal-burning power plants caused 755,000 more tons of nitrogen oxide pollution in 1998 than in 1992, equivalent to that emitted yearly by 37 million cars. Indiana had a 17% increase in coal fired plants. The increased smog pollution from Indiana, Illinois, West Virginia, North Carolina, Missouri and Georgia each equaled that from two million cars. The increased global warming pollution in the nation is equal to that from 44 million cars. Older power plants are exempted from the emissions controls enforced by the Clean Air Act passed in 1970. U.S. Public Interest Research Group

    Federal Report on Global Warming Predicts Widespread Impact on U.S.  A government report entitled "Climate Change and Our Nation," projects an increase in average U.S. temperatures of between 5 and 10 degrees Fahrenheit over the next century and that global warming will produce widespread changes in the U.S. climate in future decades. Drought-like conditions will hit every region of the country, sea levels will rise and urban populations may wilt under searing temperatures. The report predicts disproportionately hotter cities from both global warming and the urban heat-island, more extreme precipitation and faster evaporation, leading to greater frequency of drought and/or floods, extensive damage to some ecosystems, rising sea levels in coastal areas and shrinkage of coastal wetlands, more heat waves, and increased crop yields (but pests, droughts and floods could reduce these yields). Coastal areas, maple-sugar producers, alpine meadows, and ski resorts resorts will suffer. Water will become a key concern: droughts, floods, declining snow packs and water quality, and possibly greater water use conflicts could become even more common problems than they are today. A joint press release from the Environmental Defense, National Environmental Trust, Natural Resources Defense Council, Union of Concerned Scientists & World Wildlife Fund was also published on this important report. June 12, 2000 CNN 

    Development, Runoff & Population in LA.  As population and pavement grows, the Los Angeles region suffers what is believed to be the nation's worst urban runoff problem. Oily waste, pesticides, metal residue, pet feces and other pollutants wash off streets, roofs and parking lots into channels and drains that flow into beach waters. New building projects across the county will be required to limit urban runoff that flows from roofs, parking lots and other pavement so that it doesn't foul ocean waters, according to a decision by the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board. Only a handful of places in the country, including Phoenix and Florida, have restricted the pollution that flows off urban land. Most of Los Angeles County's 85 cities wanted to reject the runoff standards. On dry summer days, enough runoff to fill the Rose Bowl contaminates beaches within 100 yards or so of river mouths and storm drains. On a rainy day, there is so much contaminated storm water that all beaches are rendered unsafe with bacteria and viruses. January 27, 2000 LA Times

    Agressive US Global Warming Policy Would Mean Large Cost Savings and Job Gains.  The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said that the United States currently accounts for half of all carbon dioxide emissions by western industrialized nation, but the the U.S government has favored using the potential loopholes in the 1997 Kyoto climate treaty, rather than reducing emissions domestically. Other countries are waiting for a leadership signal from the U.S. and "it is a matter of economic self interest." The US could save as much as $43 billion per year on energy costs, and create more than 870,000 new jobs by 2010, while reducing emissions by 14% below 1990 levels, twice the Kyoto specified amount. Recommendations include: incentives for fuel-efficient vehicles and energy-saving equipment; elimination of regulatory impediments; new efficiency standards for buildings, cars, household appliances and office equipment; enhanced research and development; and improvements in land-use and infrastructure reductions in subsidies to polluters. Job increases would occur in services, construction, education, manufacturing, transportation and communications, agriculture, and finance. August 10, 1999 Xinhua


    Garbage

    Americans produce 430 billion pounds of household trash each year.


    Sprawl

    Every day, an estimated nine square miles of U.S. rural land is lost to development. How Much is Enough, Alan Durning, p. 148 1996

    Please click here to go to WOA!!s 'Sprawl' page.



    Imports, Exports, Exploitation

  • Mar 16 1998 AP Average US Home Owner Guilty of Endangering Forests wooden doors, paneling, or wooden tool handles may be from endangered forests. Home Depot sells doors from endangered Amazon rainforest Mahogany, or plywood from Lauan wood from Southeast Asia forests where old growth forests (not including parks) are predicted to be gone by 2010.
  • Mar 16 1998 InterPressService Environmentalists Blast World Trade Organization Timber Trade Plans.  Liberalizing trade in timber products would increase global devastation of forests. U.S. government wants agreement to reduce global tariffs on wood products. The agreement says nothing about forest protection or sustainable logging practices. Proposed bans of the use of endangered tropical wood or on wood products that are likely to carry destructive pests could be found to be barriers to trade and in violation of WTO rules.

  • California

    California: Human Dynamic Swamps State's Building Blocks. .  Infrastructure has not kept pace with population growth in California. New road capacity, water supplies, housing stock and, now, even electricity has been exceeded by the demand. A quarter of the population of California was not born in the US. In previous years, the impacts of rapid overall population growth were moderated by the poverty of many new immigrants. Newly arrived, and poor, their average demands on the state's infrastructure were relatively low. If those coming into California had been native-born migrants from Texas and Michigan instead of immigrants from Mexico and Korea, California's infrastructure demands would have surged much sooner, placing the state in worse jeopardy than it is today. Those immigrants who had lived in the U.S. for less than a decade increased from 3.4% to 11.1% of the state's total population from 1970 to 1990. As of 1990, the average per capita electricity consumption by newcomers was 53% below consumption of the native-born population; water consumption was 27% lower; number of cars owned was 39% lower; and the proportion of homeowners was 72% lower. Now the inflow of new immigrants has leveled off, ending three decades of acceleration. Now those same immigrants comprise a bigger portion of the population, and they are more established, their poverty rate has dropped, which translates into large and previously unexpected increases in demand for roadways, housing, water, electricity and other infrastructure. When the lights go out, they go out for everyone, regardless of where they were born or how long they have lived in the state. March 1, 2001 Los Angeles Times

    California Power Crisis May Become National Mess . Thursday marked the 31st day of an electricity shortage in California. Members of a U.S. House Energy panel warned that the chronic situation could become a national economic mess unless action is taken to revamp aging transmission lines and build more power generators. The growing demand for electricity is due to an increasing population and a greater use of computers. A deregulation scheme approved by the state in 1996, high natural gas prices, the lack of new power plants due to strict state siting rules, and high demand are found to be responsible for the crisis. Two of the largest utilities - Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas & Electric - are near bankruptcy. The economy of California equals 12% of the country's GDP. Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-Louisiana), who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee said the power trouble "could be just the first sign of what could be problems all over America." February 16, 2001 Reuters California's population will increase to 49.3 million by the year 2025 -an increase of 18 million, which would be as if all of the state of New York moved in, a result of an anticipated 22 million births, 9 million immigrants, and offset by deaths. U.S. Census Bureau and FAYE FIORE, Times Staff Writer 9/97

    California is filling up because of births, immigration and a robust economy that motivates folks to put down roots here. In many respects, it's an old pattern. The state grew by about 10 million in the last 20 years, and by slightly less than that number in the two decades before. The Dallas Morning News

    In 1999, California's population jumped by 537,000 to reach 33.5 million in mid-1998. Los Angeles County posted the highest numerical population gain for the 12-month period, adding 125,200 people for a total of 9,649,800. (41% of that increase due to immigration from other countries). Dept. of Finance Jan 27, 1999

    10% of California's population lives in rural areas. California's Central Valley, the world's single largest producer of fruits and vegetables.

    California is one of the world's most botanically diverse regions, having a wide range of climates and soils.


    California: Growth Fights Fill a Vacuum.  By Dan Walters. Driven by high rates of births and foreign immigration, California is experiencing one of its longer periods of high-level population growth. The state has grown from 24 million Californians in 1980 to approximately 35 million (expected when the 2000 U.S. Census is tabulated). 6 million people a year are expected to be added to California's population, reaching 50 million around 2025. Those additional millions will need places to live and work, plus water, open space, sewage treatment, clean air, transportation, education and electric power. These needs will constitute California's single greatest public policy challenge, yet this challenge will be largely ignored by public officials. We address problems such as traffic congestion, water shortages or school crowding as if they were accidents of fate, rather than logical and largely predictable consequences. The California Planning and Development Report says 50 measures dealing with growth will appear on local ballots next month. Measures vary from strict development controls and urban development limits in some areas, to pro-growth measures, such as Sacramento County's ballot measure that would authorize a huge senior housing complex outside the county's urban development line. All these growth conflicts at the local level results in a policy patchwork which squeezes development -- which must occur because of population growth -- into communities most receptive to growth, whether or not it makes sense overall. Tougher controls in coastal areas forces development into inland agricultural valleys, for example, and contributes to sprawl and transportation congestion. October 11, 2000 Sacramento Bee


    California's Aging Population.  In 1995, the number of people 65 or older was 10.4% of the total population. In 2000, it will be 10.7%, in 2010, 11.4%, and 2020, 14%. The increase is due to the large number of 'Baby Boomers', born from 1946 to 1964. Who will pay the taxes?June 1999 Sacramento Bee

    Births, Deaths, and Immigration, 1997 to 1998
    Area 7/1/98
    Population
    (Estimate)
    7/1/97
    Population
    (Estimate)
    Numerical
    Change
    Percent Change Births Deaths NIM NDM
    United States 270,298,524 267,743,595 2,554,929 1.0 3,890,842 2,311,727 952,938 0
    California 32,666,550 32,182,118 484,432 1.5 52,6785 223,066 268,685 -89,711
    NIM = Net International Migration     NDM = Net Domestic Migration     US Census Bureau



    California: Capital Reaches 406,899 or So.  California has 33,145,121 residents, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, based on 1990 projectons. The the California Department of Finance, which uses drivers license information, estimates the state's population at one million more. Sacramento is the 38th largest city (about the same as Fresno and Las Vegas) in the nation according to new population estimates from the US Census Bureau. The top three cities remain unchanged: New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. In California, the biggest cities are Los Angeles (with 3,633,591 residents), San Diego (1,238,974), San Jose (867,675) and San Francisco (746,777). Sacramento's population grew 3% from 1990 to 1999, and its suburbs mushroomed. Neighboring Rocklin grew 83%, to 34,205 last year, making it sixth fastest-growing city in California. Roseville grew 72% in the same time period. Galt, another Sacramento County community, grew by 95%, from only 8,954 in 1990. October 20, 2000 Sacramento Bee


    The southern California counties of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego combined are expected to account for more than half of California's births during the next ten years. Los Angeles county alone, although projected to decline through 2002, will account for 29% of the State's births during the ten-year period. CAPS November 17, 2000


    Where Bacteria Meet the Beach. In 1998, California beaches statewide were closed for a total of 3,273 days - compared with 745 days in 1991, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council. Most of the closures were due to sewage spills and urban runoff (muck that runs off from streets, rooftops and lawns). The growing populations and aging sewer systems add to the problem. Improved bacteria-level monitoring and heavy El Nino rainy seasons have also contribute to the increase in closures. California's 740-mile coast has more than 50,000 visitors and annually, which generates $14 billion, a fifth of California's total $67.9 billion travel and tourism industry. A new law says that coastal counties must test ocean water weekly from April to October, to see if bacteria and pathogen levels are low enough to allow swimming and fishing. June 11, 2000 ENN 

    Bay Area chooses to Limit Growth.  Bay Area voters approved more than a dozen measures to manage rampant growth. Alameda County was stripped of its power to convert most farmland into housing tracts and shopping malls without a vote of the people. Of the 18 growth-related measures in the region, only five lost. Most of the winning measures set or strengthen urban growth boundaries around cities, including San Jose. The Home Builder Association of Northern California said such measures worsen the area's already severe housing shortage by pushing development farther east and south, and neighbors complain because it puts too much traffic on their streets. Throughout California, 35 of 54 measures, 65%, passed, as compared to only half in 1998, according to the California Planning & Development Report. In Arizona and Colorado, two statewide initiatives to limit growth failed by a 2-to-1 ratio. [A Washington Post article said that growth control suffers when the debate can be converted into environmental protection vs. affordable housing. For example, the housing group Habitat for Humanity fought the initiative in Colorado saying that the anti-sprawl measure "threatens our mission and the future of affordable housing in Colorado." Opponents pointed to the growth of housing costs in Portland and in Boulder, Colo., which has a growth boundary. (Advocates pointed out that housing costs in Denver have gone up even faster than in Portland, even though Denver has no growth restrictions.) Opponents attacked Loudoun County's slow-growth efforts as "snob zoning" that would preserve open space for the affluent while driving up housing costs for the less well-off. .... In yet another article from The Tracy Press, Tracy residents voted in favor of slow growth with 56.1% of voters favoring Measure A which amends the city's Growth Management Ordinance by cutting the number of residential building permits that can be issued in half, from a maximum of 1,500 to 750 and an average of 1,200 to 600.] November 9, 2000 San Jose Mercury News


    Immigration

    In 1994, net legal immigration added about 816,000 people [about 50% of the growth] to the U.S. The Mexican-born population of the U.S. is eight million - 1/3 of which are undocumented aliens. More than 315,000 undocumented Mexicans are estimated to have entered the U.S. in 1998. Emigration from Mexico to the U.S. is expected to increase by at least 50% in the next 15 years.

    Should the U.S. look at immigration globally, that is, immigration has little or no impact on the world environment, or should the U.S. look at immigration locally, where all increases in population have an impact on the U.S. environment. Some will argue that immigrants to the U.S. consume much more than their counterparts left behind in foreign countries. Click here for more on this topic.


     



    USA Population News

    WOA!! Do we need your help! This is news we had no time to file properly. We are looking for a 'USA Population' section chief (volunteer) to organize this mess in a more logical fashion. To apply for the job, go ahead and reorganize this page (a wee bit of HTML knowledge required), and email it to me, HTML and all. Please maintain the current web site style.

  • March 11, 2001 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Constant Migration Begins to Tax Once-Rural Areas.  In places such as Nashotah, the 2000 census numbers released Thursday showed what many already knew: Older cities and many of their first-ring suburbs are losing population while outlying rural communities are swelling. At the same time, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the rate at which Wisconsin land is being developed more than doubled between 1992 and 1997 -- the latest five-year period studied -- compared with the 1980s. Thousands of acres of once verdant farm fields have given way to sparkling new homes, factories and shopping centers. Since 1990, towns like Oak Creek have grown 46%, Franklin by 35%, Jackson by 99%, Caledonia by 12%, New Berlin by 14%, Waterford by 67%. Enormous pressure is put on communities to pay for services and infrastructure, while there is concern that the character that once defined these places is being lost. Residents have protested some developments, arguing new buildings are exacerbating storm water drainage systems and causing flooding. Some communities have begun requiring larger lot sizes, in part to lower density.
  • March 22, 2001 Associated Press Census' Immigrant Figures Increase .  In the past 10 years 11 million to 12 million immigrants came to the United States, surpassing an earlier projection by at least 2.5 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau and the Immigration and Naturalization Service preliminary projections. The Bureau estimates the country's foreign-born population in 2000 at 11% of the nation's 281 million residents. Critics of the unusually high immigration rates say tighter measures are necessary to help ease the burden on school systems, and reduce the number of illegal workers competing with U.S. citizens in the unskilled labor market. Pro-immigration groups urged lawmakers to provide local communities and school districts with additional money for bilingual education and social services. The Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), based on 2000 census and INS data said that there were about 5 million illegal immigrants arriving in the past decade, for a total of 7 million illegal aliens living in the U.S., about 1 million higher than previous estimates. CIS says that the federal government must strengthen immigration enforcement at border crossings and in the interior of the country, and crack down on businesses that hire undocumented immigrants. The percentage of Americans who are foreign-born has steadily increased since 1970, when 4.7% of the population was born outside the country. [Note: both legal and undocumented immigrants tend to have higher birth rates. Thus it is the immigrants who contribute most to the 1% growth rate of this country, a rate which would double the U.S. population in 70 years if it does not decrease.]
  • March 16, 2001 Las Vegas Sun Proposal to Curb Growth Divides Group. A proposal has been put on the membership ballot to force the Sierra Club to confront immigration issues by looking at population as one of the major causes of sprawl. According to "Weighing Sprawl Factors in Large U.S. Cities", about 4,500 people, on average, live on a square mile in the Las Vegas area. That compares favorably with other growing cities in the Southwest. Portland, Ore., a city that gets high marks from environmentalists for sprawl control, has about 3,900 people per square mile. The report was authored by Roy Beck, a Washington journalist for 20 years, and natural-resource planner Leon Kolankiewicz, formerly with the Orange County, Calif., Environmental Management Agency. "You can focus forever on 'smart growth' measures -- good population density -- but if you have high population growth, you're still going to get eaten up by sprawl." The study relies heavily on U.S. Census Bureau numbers. Beck's conclusion is that the only local way to affect urban sprawl is to slow economic development, making the area less attractive to job-seekers and the national solution is that the federal government has to make immigration a lot more difficult, a proposal rejected by business, Hispanic activists and many environmentalists, including the Sierra Club's leadership. Club Executive Director Carl Pope characterized the anti-immigration effort as short-sighted. He agreed population growth has a profound effect on the environment, but said efforts to control that growth have to be global to have any effect. "The ballot initiative is the wrong way to go about this." The Southern Nevada Home Builders Association said limiting economic expansion in the Las Vegas Valley would threaten the jobs of 75,000 construction workers, the region's No. 2 industry. The complete text of this article is available by password to WOA!!'s editors and contributors here. [Note: WOA's editor/publisher thinks that the US environment will be wrecked and severe energy and water shortages will be experienced long before there is enough of an economic equity between the US and those countries from which most immigrants come. Such an economic equity may be impossible except if the US economy makes an extreme downturn.]
  • March 13, 2001 Christian Science Monitor A Tale of How Two Cities Have Dealt with Growth .  In 10 years, Nevada has grown 66% - well ahead of second-place Arizona (40%), Utah (30%), and Montana (20%). Nevada's Las Vegas has been the nation's fastest-growing city for more than 60 years and is suffering from a dizzying array of plights from its excessively high population growth. It is a city that is struggling to keep up with the most basic services - schools, roads, plumbing, and drinking water supply The city was recently cited for its polluted air and now experiences serious traffic and crime problems. The overwhelming majority of jobs taken by the large numbers of Vegas migrants were in retail, food, and hotel services. The mayor hopes to raise its educational standards to attract businesses that need highly educated workers. This would help revitalize the city's economy. Reno, another gambling mecca, is a much smaller city (350,000 metro area), which, in spite of it's size, supports a full philharmonic orchestra, an opera, three dance companies, and the only certified museum in the state. It is also the gateway to Lake Tahoe and the surrounding Sierra countryside. City officials are also trying to use Reno's slow growth compared with Las Vegas (about 3 percent annually), and its relative isolation as a selling point for hunters, skiers, and hikers. "What we have here that Vegas doesn't are mountains, clean air, snowy slopes, and more temperate weather," says Dave Howard, a staff analyst for the Reno Chamber of Commerce. "People here like it just fine that we are not growing any faster." However, its slower growth is about to cost it some real political clout when the 2000 census figures are used to reapportion state legislative districts. Reno is likely to lose some seats. --JP
  • March 11, 2001 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Constant Migration Begins to Tax Once-Rural Areas.  In places such as Nashotah, the 2000 census numbers released Thursday showed what many already knew: Older cities and many of their first-ring suburbs are losing population while outlying rural communities are swelling. At the same time, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the rate at which Wisconsin land is being developed more than doubled between 1992 and 1997 -- the latest five-year period studied -- compared with the 1980s. Thousands of acres of once verdant farm fields have given way to sparkling new homes, factories and shopping centers. Since 1990, towns like Oak Creek have grown 46%, Franklin by 35%, Jackson by 99%, Caledonia by 12%, New Berlin by 14%, Waterford by 67%. Enormous pressure is put on communities to pay for services and infrastructure, while there is concern that the character that once defined these places is being lost. Residents have protested some developments, arguing new buildings are exacerbating storm water drainage systems and causing flooding. Some communities have begun requiring larger lot sizes, in part to lower density.
  • March 8, 2001 Christian Science Monitor California: Amid Pines, a Model for Growth.  Over the past 10 years, the pace of growth in this region's 21 counties has actually outpaced the rate in California's more urban areas, as nature lovers and Silicon Valley refugees use the region to ski, hike, and hunt. Rural communities across the country are struggling in the effort to balance growth and development with a unique sense of place. As more and more people migrate from cities to pristine rural areas, communities from the Colorado Rockies to the wide expanses of Arizona and New Mexico are openly debating land use and values: open space versus development, habitat versus jobs, ranch land versus recreation.
  • February 28, 2001 MSNBC Bill to Ban Refuge Drilling Introduced - Coastal Arctic Plain Would Become 'Federal Wilderness Area' .  Democrats and even a few Republicans introduced legislation to permanently ban any oil or natural gas drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The move came as the president in his budget blueprint estimated U.S. royalties of $1.2 billion by 2004 from companies that successfully bid to develop oil and gas resources in the refuge. Environmentalists say increasing the fuel mileage of cars by just 3 mpg would save the same amount of oil that could be tapped from the refuge over 10 years. Government estimates put the amount of economically recoverable oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge at between 3.2 billion and 16 billion barrels. The United States uses about 20 million barrels of crude oil and refined petroleum products every day. [Let's face it folks! Oil production is peaking and will slide downward while demand continues to rise as population and overconsumption increases.]