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Agricultural Matters
Another nail in to the coffin of UK agriculture?
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<blockquote data-quote="Cowabunga" data-source="post: 7786888" data-attributes="member: 718"><p>Says I. Not sure about halved but significantly lower than today apart from Africa. By 2100 even Asia and India re forecast to have declining population. The world population will continue to rise for probably the next 40 years or so only due to those already born up to ten years ago, not because there are more people being born than dying. Africa is unfortunately forecast to continue to grow their population until they stop killing each other and start universally educating women and actually producing wealth, so that their health and welfare, particularly child mortality rates improve. Then, as in all other developed and fast developing areas, birth rates will fall to achieve just about a population balance.</p><p>European birthrates are currently and generally well below that needed to maintain a long term stable population, let alone a growing one.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cowabunga, post: 7786888, member: 718"] Says I. Not sure about halved but significantly lower than today apart from Africa. By 2100 even Asia and India re forecast to have declining population. The world population will continue to rise for probably the next 40 years or so only due to those already born up to ten years ago, not because there are more people being born than dying. Africa is unfortunately forecast to continue to grow their population until they stop killing each other and start universally educating women and actually producing wealth, so that their health and welfare, particularly child mortality rates improve. Then, as in all other developed and fast developing areas, birth rates will fall to achieve just about a population balance. European birthrates are currently and generally well below that needed to maintain a long term stable population, let alone a growing one. [/QUOTE]
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Another nail in to the coffin of UK agriculture?
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