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Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming: Mitigation, Adaptation, and the Science Base (1992)
Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP)

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. "N Population Growth and Greenhouse Gas Emissions." Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming: Mitigation, Adaptation, and the Science Base. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1992.

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Page 809

Appendix N
Population Growth and Greenhouse Gas Emissions

By utilizing World Bank categories of actual economic growth experience and projected population growth rates, the scenarios for population, per capita income, CO2 emissions, and family planning (FP) effect are computed and reported in Table N.1. Each group of countries is indexed to 1.00 in 1990. Thus numbers reported for the years 2020, 2050, and 2100 are multiples of the 1990 base.

The rules for calculations include the following:

1.  Population is projected for the 1990 to 2020 period by using World Bank projections for 1987 to 2000 for each group. The growth rates (as shown in Table N.1) are from the World Development Report, Table 6. For 2020 to 2050, each group is expected to achieve the population projection for the next highest group in the 1990 to 2020 period (except for the NIEs, who remain at the 1987 to 2000 level). The situation is similar for 2050 to 2100, except that the NIEs have stationary growth.

2.  As shown in Table N.1, per capita income for 1990 to 2020 is projected to grow at actual 1965 to 1987 rates (World Bank, 1989, Table 1), except that the NIEs maintain their high growth rates only for 1990 to 2020 and then revert to the upper-middle-income economy growth rates after 2020.

3.  Annual CO2 emissions are calculated from population and income projections. It is assumed that CO2 emissions increase proportionately with population for all income levels. For low income levels (i.e., multiples below 5), it is assumed that CO2 emissions additionally increase proportionately with per capita income growth. For higher incomes, CO2 emissions increase less than proportionately with per capita income growth (i.e., at 0.8 for income multiples between 5 and 10, 0.7 for multiples between 10 and 30, and 0.6 for higher multiples). These estimates are based on World Bank Estimates (Siddayo, 1987).

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809
Front Matter (R1-R26)
Part One: Synthesis (1-2)
1 Introduction (3-4)
2 Background (5-11)
3 The Greenhouse Gases and Their Effects (12-28)
4 Policy Framework (29-35)
5 Adaptation (36-47)
6 Mitigation (48-64)
7 International Considerations (65-67)
8 Findings and Conclusions (68-72)
9 Recommendations (73-83)
Individual Statement by a Member Of The Synthesis Panel (84-86)
Part Two: The Science Base (87-88)
10 Introduction (89-90)
11 Emission Rates and Concentrations Of Greenhouse Gases (91-99)
12 Radiative Forcing and Feedback (100-110)
13 Model Performance (111-116)
14 The Climate Record (117-134)
15 Hydrology (135-139)
16 Sea Level (140-144)
17 A Greenhouse Forcing and Temperature Rise Estimation Procedure (145-152)
18 Conclusions (153-154)
Part Three: Mitigation (155-156)
19 Introduction (157-170)
20 Framework for Evaluating Mitigation Options (171-200)
21 Residential and Commercial Energy Management (201-247)
22 Industrial Energy Management (248-285)
23 Transportation Energy Management (286-329)
24 Energy Supply Systems (330-375)
25 Nonenergy Emission Reduction (376-413)
26 Population (414-423)
27 Deforestation (424-432)
28 Geoengineering (433-464)
29 Findings and Recommendations (465-498)
Part Four: Adaptation (499-500)
30 Findings (501-507)
31 Recommendations (508-514)
32 Issues, Assumptions, and Values (515-524)
33 Methods and Tools (525-540)
34 Sesitivities, Impacts, and Adaptations (541-652)
35 Indices (653-656)
36 Final Words (657-658)
Individual Statement by a Member of the Adaptation Panel (659-660)
Appendixes (661-662)
A Questions and Answers About Greenhouse Warming (663-691)
B Thinking About Time in the Context of Global Climate Change (692-707)
C Conservation Supply Curves for Buildings (708-716)
D Conservation Supply Curves for Industrial Energy Use (717-726)
E Conservation Supply Data for Three Transportation Sectors (727-758)
F Transportation System Management (759-766)
G Nuclear Energy (767-774)
H A Solar Hydrogen System (775-778)
I Biomass (779-785)
J Cost-Effectiveness of Electrical Generation Technologies (786-791)
K Cost-Effectiveness of Chlorofluorocarbon Phaseout—United States and Worldwide (792-797)
L Agriculture (798-807)
M Landfill Methane Reduction (808-808)
N Population Growth and Greenhouse Gas Emissions (809-811)
O Deforestation Prevention (812-813)
P Reforestation (814-816)
Q Geoengineering Options (817-835)
R Description of Economic Estimates of the Cost of Reducing Greenhouse Emissions (836-839)
S Glossary (840-846)
T Conversion Tables (847-848)
U Prefaces from the Individual Panel Reports (849-854)
V Acknowledgments from the Individual Panel Reports (855-857)
W Background Information on Panel Members and Professional Staff (858-868)
Index (869-918)

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OCR for page 809
Page 809 Appendix N Population Growth and Greenhouse Gas Emissions By utilizing World Bank categories of actual economic growth experience and projected population growth rates, the scenarios for population, per capita income, CO2 emissions, and family planning (FP) effect are computed and reported in Table N.1. Each group of countries is indexed to 1.00 in 1990. Thus numbers reported for the years 2020, 2050, and 2100 are multiples of the 1990 base. The rules for calculations include the following: 1.  Population is projected for the 1990 to 2020 period by using World Bank projections for 1987 to 2000 for each group. The growth rates (as shown in Table N.1) are from the World Development Report, Table 6. For 2020 to 2050, each group is expected to achieve the population projection for the next highest group in the 1990 to 2020 period (except for the NIEs, who remain at the 1987 to 2000 level). The situation is similar for 2050 to 2100, except that the NIEs have stationary growth. 2.  As shown in Table N.1, per capita income for 1990 to 2020 is projected to grow at actual 1965 to 1987 rates (World Bank, 1989, Table 1), except that the NIEs maintain their high growth rates only for 1990 to 2020 and then revert to the upper-middle-income economy growth rates after 2020. 3.  Annual CO2 emissions are calculated from population and income projections. It is assumed that CO2 emissions increase proportionately with population for all income levels. For low income levels (i.e., multiples below 5), it is assumed that CO2 emissions additionally increase proportionately with per capita income growth. For higher incomes, CO2 emissions increase less than proportionately with per capita income growth (i.e., at 0.8 for income multiples between 5 and 10, 0.7 for multiples between 10 and 30, and 0.6 for higher multiples). These estimates are based on World Bank Estimates (Siddayo, 1987).

OCR for page 810
Page 810 TABLE N.1 Relationship Between Population and Greenhouse Gas Emissions     Low-Income Economies Lower- Middle-Income Economies Upper- Middle-Income Economies Newly Industrialized Economies Population (2.6) (2.1) (1.7) (0.8)   1990 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0   2020 2.16 1.87 1.66 1.27   2050 4.03 3.10 2.10 1.61   2100 9.36 4.62 3.12 1.61 Per capita income (1.5) (2.2) (2.9) (6.2)   1990 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0   2020 1.56 1.92 2.35 6.07   2050 2.43 3.69 5.54 14.31   2100 5.11 10.95 23.14 59.75 CO2 emissions, annual         1990 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0   2020 3.37 3.59 3.90 6.17   2050 9.79 11.44 11.63 16.12   2100 47.83 40.47 67.06 57.71 CO2 emissions, cumulated         1990 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0   2020 65.5 68.8 73.5 107.5   2050 262.9 294.3 306.4 441.3   2100 1,703.4 1,591 2,271 2,286 Family planning effect (base = CO2 emission, cumulated)     1990           2020 0.20 0.56 0.49 1.34   2050 2.94 3.43 6.54 7.01   2100 58.71 51.90 34.65 89.09

OCR for page 811
Page 811 4.  The cumulative CO2 emissions simply sum up annual emissions to the period indicated. 5.  "Family planning" effects are calculated as the difference in population between a given group and the next lower group, multiplied by the income multiples of the group. Thus they represent the amount of increased emissions if the population were as large as it would be with the next lower group's population. For the lowest-income economies, the family planning effect is presumed to be the difference between the actual 2.8 percent growth rate over the 1965 to 1987 period and the 2.6 percent projected for 1987 to 2000. These calculations are based on actual evidence to a considerable extent. A number of countries in the low-income category are actually experiencing no per capita income growth, and many are experiencing population growth more rapid than 2.6 percent. Construction of scenarios for these cases would not be very realistic. The major points of this exercise are that family planning impacts on greenhouse gas emissions are important at all levels of development. It is probably not feasible to achieve low population growth rates without moving up the development scale. The reduced population growth associated with higher-income growth (and to a small degree with lower-income elasticities as income rises) offsets in large part the higher greenhouse gas emissions associated with faster economic growth. The family planning effects indicate that as of the year 2020, carbon emissions will be about 15 percent lower for the lower-middle- and upper-middle-income countries than they would be without family planning. Strong family planning programs are in the interests of all countries for greenhouse gas concerns as well as for broader welfare concerns. References Siddayo, C. 1987. Petroleum resources in the Pacific rim: The roles played by governments in their development and trade. In The Pacific Rim: Investment, Development, and Trade, P. Nemetz, ed. Vancouver, B.C.: University of British Columbia Press. World Bank. 1989. 1989 World Development Report. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.

Representative terms from entire chapter:

population growth