FOUR CHALLENGES FACING INFRASTRUCTURE
Download
Report
Transcript FOUR CHALLENGES FACING INFRASTRUCTURE
Global Challenges for
the 21st Century
Dr. Hongjoo Hahm
World Bank Office Croatia
Challenge 1:
Scarcity of Resources
(Constant Birth Rate Scenario)
4
World Population
(1950
- 2050)
World
Population
1950
–
2050
(Medium Case)
Population
10
Population (billions)
9
8
7
6
5
In the next 40 years, the global
population will grow by almost
2.5 billion
and more than half of those
will live in developing
countries
4
3
2
1
19
50
19
55
19
60
19
65
19
70
19
75
19
80
19
85
19
90
19
95
20
00
20
05
20
10
20
15
20
20
20
25
20
30
20
35
20
40
20
45
20
50
0
Year
Source: UNPD 2007
World
5
Less developed regions
More developed regions
Least developed regions
6
7
8
9
10
IIIIII
Washington Post
11
Washington Post
Gapminder
Fertility vs. Income per capita
12
13
14
Gapminder
Fertility vs. Girl’s Education
15
16
World Urban Population
In 1950, 68% of world’s population from developing countries
In 2010, 85% of world population from developing countries
In 2008, one-half 50%of the world’s people lived in cities
By 2050, two-thirds 66% of the world’s people will live in cities
17
Source: UNHSP/Basics1/02
POPULATION IN BILLIONS
10
8
6
4
2
An Urban World
URBAN DEVELOPING
URBAN DEVELOPED
RURAL
18
IIIIII
Global Population Density by 2015
IIIIII
19
Source: Poverty Mapping Urban Rural Population Database, United Nations FAO, 2005
Urbanization: Mega-Cities
Megacities today
• Cover just 2% of the Earth’s
land surface
• 75% of industrial wood use
• 60% of human water use
• Nearly 80% of all human
produced carbon emissions
Map source: www.channelone.com
Megacities tomorrow
• By 2025 more than 300
cities worldwide will have
more than 1 million people
• The struggle to achieve an
environmentally sustainable
economy for the 21st
century will be won or lost
in the world's urban areas
20
IIIIII
Source: www3.sympatico.ca/truegrowth/demographics.htm
21
Global Population:
Rising Demand for Resources
• Too Many (especially in developing world)
• Too Old (especially in developed world)
• Too Urban (globally)
• Global Migration
22
Population and Human Development Needs
Of 6.5 billion people in the world today
• 1.6 billion lack basic energy services
• 2.5 billion use wood, dung or other biomass to
cook their food
• 2.6 billion people lack access to clean water
and sanitation
By 2050, almost 2.5 billion people will be born.
Is there enough to go around?
23
IIIIII
Resources
24
Scarce resources
25
26
Global Water Scarcity
27
IIIIII
UNEP
28
IIIIII
http://www.albertapcf.ab.ca/grasslands/images/
library/mixed/Irrigation.JPG
http://photogallery.nrcs.usda.gov/Index.asp
29
IIIIII
How Much?
1 kg of lettuce
1 kg of tomatoes
1 kg of potatoes
1 kg of wheat
1 kg of carrots
1 kg of apples
1 kg of chicken
1 kg of pork
IIIIII
30
174 liters
174 liters
180 liters
188 liters
250 liters
370 liters
6,170 liters
12,340 liters
University of California
- 1/3 of arable land
used for cattle grazing.
- 1/3 of methane
produced by cows
- 1/3 of grain produced
used for cow fodder
One kilogram of grain-fed beef needs at least
22,710 liters of water
IIIIII
31
32
the greenhouse gas emissions arising every year from the production and
consumption of cheeseburgers is roughly the amount emitted by 6.5 million to
19.6 million SUVs
33
"In a world where an estimated
one in every six people goes hungry every day,
the politics of meat consumption are
increasingly heated, since meat production is
an inefficient use of grain …...
Continued growth in meat output is
dependent on feeding grains to animals,
creating competition for grain
between affluent meat eaters
and the world's poor.”
Worldwatch Institute
IIIIII
34
35
Keeping Up?
IIIIII
36
Source: Meadows, Randers and Meadows: LTG 30 year update 2004
Losing Focus on Food Production
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; International Rice Research Institute; US Department of Agriculture;
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; via the World Bank. Via the New York Times
37
IIIIII
Food vs. Energy
38
IIIIII
Source: Commodity Research Bureau
The Times
March 7, 2008
‘Rush for bio fuels threatens starvation
on a global scale’
In 2010, more than 1/3 of
US corn acreage was
earmarked for bio ethanol
IIIIII
39
Estimated growth in fertilizer use 1960-2020
40
IIIIII
41
Philippe Rekacewicz, UNEP/GRID-Arendal
42
Deforestation
Forest cover 1996
Forests Likely to Survive Without Human Assistance
Source: Bryant. D., Nielsen. D. and Tangeley. L. (1997)
43
IIIIII
Satellite image of
Global Burning
with inset of
Indonesia taken
2009
*Source: ATSR Fire Atlas, European Space Agency
44
Primary energy consumption
45
Primary Energy Consumption
46
Fossil fuel use
Source: EIA
47
‘Peak’ Oil
48
IIIIII
Proven oil reserves
49
World Oil Consumption
50
Asia-Pacific Oil Consumption
51
Source: University of Cambridge
Proven Gas Reserves
52
World gas consumption
53
Coal production and consumption
54
Hydrocarbon energy and CO2
55
56
GapMinder
C02 output per capita
vs.
Income per capita
57
58
Options for change
59
Challenge 2:
Climate Change
60
Climate Change
61
Carbon concentration in the
atmosphere today is higher
than it has been at any point
in the last 66,000 years
62
IIIIII
New Scientist
63
oC
per decade (1979 - 2005)
Source: IPCC AR4
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
Ecological Footprint 1996 and 2050
IIIIII
0
3
6
IIIIII
72
9
Source: WWF Living Planet Report 2004
So….
What do we do?
73
Global Challenges of 21st Century
“The biggest challenge ahead is
how to manage water resources faced with
competition and climate change
to meet rising food needs
while protecting the access of poor
and vulnerable people.”
Kevin Watkins. Lead Author - Beyond scarcity:
Power, poverty and the global water crisis
74
IIIIII
Adapting to a changing world
Any one of these challenges alone is cause for
global action.
In combination they exacerbate existing threats
and create new ones.
Development strategies must take into account
all factors facing the world today.
The need to act now is imperative
75
IIIIII
76
Coming soon…….?
• Significantly increased global migration
• Growth of urban agriculture
• Eco cities
• Retro fitting/climate proofing infrastructure
• Increased seawater intrusion in coastal aquifers
• Increased frequency of extreme weather events
• Prioritized ‘environmental’ flows
• Declining/increasing hydro power potential
• Improved watershed management
77
IIIIII
Coming soon…….?
• Pricing of embedded water in food/products
• Rising cost pressure on carbon intensive pumping and
treatment methods
• Mass desalination
• Efficiency gains/loss reduction
• Large scale domestic & industrial rainwater catchment
• Increased water re-use
• Increased politicisation
• Heightened regional/national tensions
78
IIIIII
Global Challenges for
the 21st Century
Dr. Hongjoo Hahm
World Bank Office Croatia
79