Monday, August 17, 2009

Population and the Environment

"Convincing us to have fewer children is much easier than convincing us to organize our society more efficiently." I really liked this Vox-Nova post by Brett Salkeld. Images and bolding are soley my editing:

Recently Canada’s national new weekly, Macleans’s ran an article about the voluntarily childless. Later that same week the University of Oregon produced a study on the negative impact that having children has on the environment. Conservative groups are firing back with their documentaries, Demographic Winter and Demographic Bomb. I also happened to come across Harvard historian Niall Ferguson’s interesting piece that, among other things, indicates the trouble with an aging population.
With all this circling my head, a few questions have emerged. I am not an expert in the environment, nor in demographics, and I have not worked on this long enough to make any iron-clad claims. I am, nevertheless, concerned with the presumptions behind the arguments of the would-be population limiters.

The basic claim of the Oregon study is that having a child vastly outweighs any tiny impact one’s environmentally friendly habits (driving a hybrid, recycling, using energy efficient bulbs and appliances) might have. I have not read the study, but the media coverage I have seen is suggesting that anyone having more than two children is being extremely selfish and causing untold harm.

My first question is, “Why two?” Shouldn’t we encourage families to have one or zero.
Two seems rather arbitrary. It’s not like the third child is the one causing all the environmental damage. In fact, it seems to me that the biggest problem lies with having the first.

Having Toby drastically changed my way of life. The sheer amount of things I needed made me much more sympathetic to the historical Catholic link between poverty and chastity. Having Oscar barely cost us a thing. Large families are vastly more efficient in their use of resources than smaller ones.

Now, part of the Oregon study’s conclusions are based on the environmental impact that the children of our children will have. Including this in the calculations ensures truly astronomical savings from not having a given child to start with. I am curious, though, “Why is the impact of having children who will presumably have children not simply infinite?” Where do they stop calculating? If I am to count the carbon footprint of all my potential descendents when weighing the environmental cost of having one child, surely I shouldn’t have any children.

The two-child suggestion in the media seems a mere concession to human sentimentality rather than a rational conclusion from the data. What’s more, it seems at least possible that, should this logic come to be politically in vogue, such a concession will quickly disappear. The real response to such a study is not that we should limit our families, but that we simply shouldn’t have them. (Of course, all of this presumes that humans are simply consumers and not producers. God forbid my kid grows up to be an engineer who builds public transit systems. Or an environmental scientist at the University of Oregon.)

The study notes, apparently, that it is we North Americans who are really the problem. Our children will leave roughly 7 times the carbon footprint of a child born in China. (One wonders about the child born in Sierra Leone.) So, while the rest of the world can breed with minimal impact, we need to stop. This opens up a whole new arena of questions.

I live in Canada where it is clear that we will support our economy and our social security by means of immigration. We don’t have enough babies to sustain the companies that want to sell us things, nor to pay for the retirements of the generations that came before us. We need to import the one resource that makes the economy work: people. (And we’re only taking the best and brightest, so the third-world is going to have to do with a few less doctors, engineers and entrepreneurs.) But if we’re bringing in the kids born in China and Sierra Leone, don’t they start having the same environmental impact as the rest of us? Our economies demand people, whether they’re born here or not, and once they live here, they’re going to burn as much carbon as we do.

What seems entirely lacking is the recognition that the system is broken. The answer to using 7 times as many resources is to have 1/7 the children. We are told that all our recycling won’t get us anywhere near where we need to be in order to be sustainable. Surely that is true on an individual level. It is impossible for a North American to live on fewer resources than an African, but is that inevitable? Are there really no systematic changes we could make to cut down our resource consumption in a meaningful way? Are hybrids and blue bins the best we can do?

My brother is an architect. He says that we know with some certainty how to design cities so as to drastically cut down resource consumption but that it is politically impossible to do so. Developers who make more money from strip malls and suburbia than from efficient city living quickly dismantle any project that would work.
How does the average North American live? In a (relatively) huge house in suburbia with one or two children. We all have (relatively) huge yards that take literally tonnes of water and fertilizer and herbicide so that they can sit empty for at least 95% of the time. We spend hours a day burning fossil fuel in traffic because we all have cars and we all live a long way from where we work. Is this really inevitable?

I live in an apartment in downtown Toronto. I share a couple on-site parks with the hundreds of other families that occupy student family housing. I don’t have a car. If I need one, I can rent it or join a car-sharing co-operative like zipcar. Many of the families that do have a vehicle only use it when they go out of town. I share three walls, a ceiling and a floor with neighbours, so my heating and cooling costs are radically lower than a free-standing home. My sewage, garbage collection, yes even my recycling, are looked after with a fraction of the resources that it would take in suburbia. I walk to school. My wife walks or takes public transit to work. My kids go to daycare in our building. I don’t have a lawn to water, but I have many potential green spaces to frequent. In short, if some suburbanite chastises me for having too many kids because of the environmental cost, he hasn’t a leg to stand on.

Nevertheless, it seems quite likely that I will one day be a suburbanite. I will have to move to where I can find work when I am done my doctorate, and chances of finding affordable housing that will hold my growing family (even if we have no more children, the lads are getting bigger) and function at the level of efficiency I currently enjoy are slim to none. This inevitability is one of those things taken for granted by the authors of the Oregon study. (Of course I recognize that a scientific study that presumes no constants can never really conclude anything. Still, such a presumption could be acknowledged, even challenged, in the study’s conclusions.) They presume that North Americans must continue to live the way they live now. It seems to them that convincing us to have fewer children is much easier than convincing to organize our society more efficiently. I wonder if they even considered it as an alternative.

Perhaps the craziest part of it all is that, while we fight global-warming we are simultaneously trying to fight third-world poverty. And how do we do that? By exporting our economic model that has made this way of life a virtual necessity.

What we should be doing is building communities where families can live at peak efficiency, where people can walk to work and take advantage of public amenities, where the choice isn’t between a gas guzzler and a hybrid, but between transit, renting and a car co-op.
What we’re doing instead is selling gas guzzlers and pre-packaged food and our whole throw-away lifestyle to the third-world. They can have kids, for now. We need them to emigrate and pay for our retirements. But once their lifestyles have become as inefficient as ours, they’ll have to stop. We can always sell them the pill, right?
Responses:
Michael J. Iafrate Says:
FANTASTIC post. Thank you Brett.
They presume that North Americans must continue to live the way they live now. It seems to them that convincing us to have fewer children is much easier than convincing to organize our society more efficiently. I wonder if they even considered it as an alternative.
This is exactly right.
I live in an apartment in downtown Toronto. I share a couple on-site parks with the hundreds of other families that occupy student family housing.
Good seeing you in the elevator yesterday. ;)

radicalcatholicmom Says:
Wonderful post, Brett. You truly illustrate the lack of imagination. It seems we are stuck in a binary way of thinking either/or. Instead we should be asking “what are the real problems and what can we do to solve them?” When asked that way, imagine the infinite possibilities to solve such problems.

Matt Talbot Says:
How does the average North American live? In a (relatively) huge house in suburbia with one or two children. We all have (relatively) huge yards that take literally tonnes of water and fertilizer and herbicide so that they can sit empty for at least 95% of the time. We spend hours a day burning fossil fuel in traffic because we all have cars and we all live a long way from where we work. Is this really inevitable?
No, it is not; I think it would be better to arrange our civilization under the basic plan that obtained before about 1920; compact neighborhoods centered around public spaces (parks, civic buildings, the local parish church.)
Widespread automobile ownership has been a net negative, in my judgment. Putting aside the ecological damage they do, the physical arrangement of space in the United States is governed my the needs of cars rather than the needs of human psychology.

Blackadder Says:
Excellent post.
As paradoxical as it might sound, natural resources tend to become more plentiful the more people there are (this sounds less strange once you realize that we only consider something a “resource” once someone has figured out how to do something useful with it). So if the problem is that resources are too scarce, having fewer children won’t solve the problem and might end up making it worse.


2 comments:

A Bit of the Blarney said...

I nearly didn't pass statistics in college, so for me this is mind-boggling. I just know that without children humanity will not survive. I'm told if I understand it correctly that the countries that have already limited populations are wondering how they will manage without young people to fill the gaps...Oh, well, like I said I toast when it comes to this kind of discussion! Cathy

Soutenus said...

I believe that you are on target with that statement, Cathy!

" . . . countries that have already limited populations are wondering how they will manage without young people to fill the gap"

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