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NotesESS HLTopic 8.1Population and sustainability
Back to ESS HL Topics
8.1.31 min read

Population and sustainability

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 8

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Contents

  • Population and environmental impact
  • Population strategies and ethics
  • Exam-style question (step by step)

Population and environmental impact

Big idea: Population growth increases pressure on resources and ecosystems. However, impact depends not just on population size but also on consumption levels and technology.

The IPAT equation

Environmental impact can be expressed as:

  • I = P × A × T
  • I = Environmental Impact
  • P = Population size
  • A = Affluence (consumption per person)
  • T = Technology (impact per unit of consumption)
A small, wealthy population can have MORE impact than a large, poor one. The average American has ~16x the carbon footprint of the average Indian.

Population pressures on the environment

  • Food demand: Land conversion, intensification, overfishing
  • Water demand: Aquifer depletion, river diversion, water stress
  • Energy demand: Fossil fuel use, climate change
  • Resource extraction: Mining, deforestation, biodiversity loss
  • Waste production: Pollution, landfills, ocean plastics
  • Habitat loss: Urban expansion, agricultural expansion
Exam tip: When discussing population and environment, always consider BOTH population size AND consumption patterns. Its not just about numbers.

Population strategies and ethics

Big idea: Strategies to address population growth range from voluntary family planning to coercive policies. These raise significant ethical questions about human rights, cultural values, and who makes decisions.

Population management approaches

  • Family planning programmes: Provide contraception, information, and services — voluntary approach
  • Education investment: Especially female education — most effective long-term strategy
  • Economic development: Raises living standards, naturally reduces fertility
  • Incentives: Tax benefits for smaller families, childcare support
  • Disincentives: Penalties for large families (e.g., Chinas former one-child policy)
  • Pro-natalist policies: Encourage births in countries with ageing populations (e.g., Japan, Hungary)

Ethical considerations

Arguments for intervention

  • Environmental sustainability requires stable population
  • Resource scarcity affects everyone
  • Preventing future suffering
  • Collective responsibility

Arguments against intervention

  • Reproductive rights are human rights
  • Cultural and religious values
  • Coercion is unethical
  • Consumption matters more than population
  • Colonial/racist history of population control
Chinas one-child policy (1979-2015) showed that coercive approaches can reduce fertility but cause unintended consequences: gender imbalance, ageing population, and human rights abuses.
Exam tip: Population strategy essays require a balanced argument. Discuss effectiveness AND ethical implications before reaching a justified conclusion.

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IB-style question — Population and sustainability [1]

An age-structure pyramid for Kestria shows narrowing at the base, large working-age cohorts and a concave (tapering) top. Identify the stage of the demographic transition model this represents. [1]

How to answer it, step by step

  1. Read the pyramid shape

    • Narrowing base = falling birth rate

    • Large working-age, low death rate
  2. Match to DTM

    • Falling births + low deaths = Stage 3

    • Transitioning from Stage 2 toward Stage 4

Final answer

Examiner tip: a shrinking base with low death rate is the classic Stage 3 signal — name the single stage the data fits.

IB-style question — Carrying capacity and sustainability [2]

Kestria's population is approaching the limit its farmland and water can support. Outline two ways the country could keep its population within environmental limits. [2]

How to answer it, step by step

  1. Reduce demand / slow growth

    • Family-planning and education to lower fertility

    • Reduce per-capita resource use (efficient water/energy)
  2. Increase sustainable supply

    • Sustainable farming to raise food yield

    • Recycle/reuse to ease pressure on resources

Final answer

Examiner tip: sustainability means matching demand to carrying capacity — give one demand-side and one supply-side measure for a clean two marks.

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The country of Brevia has a population pyramid that is narrow at the base and bulges towards the top, with a large and growing proportion of people aged over 65 and a shrinking working-age group.

two implications of an ageing population for a country in the later stages of the demographic transition model. [2 marks]

Related ESS HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

8.1.1Population dynamics
8.1.2Factors affecting population change
8.2.1Urbanisation and urban growth
8.2.2Urban land use and structure
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