Water&Food
New Member
That was a good one! :lol:wrcmad said:That was tounge in cheek.wrcmad said:Umm... that was Mars....![]()
![]()
That was a good one! :lol:wrcmad said:That was tounge in cheek.wrcmad said:Umm... that was Mars....![]()
![]()
Water&Food said:You are right. I massvive headfk. I must of been smoking at time.
1/16 acre (not incl. uninhabitable and infertile), not my previous 1/4. Don't ask me how I multiplied by four. O_O
.
grinners said:Water&Food said:I crunched some math years ago proving the claimed world population can fit snuggly within the State of QLD (Australia), each person having 1/4 acre of fertile land. Leaving between 1/4 to 1/3 of QLD empty.
7 billion people on earth, so QLD would have to be 1.75 billion acres.
Australia has 1.88 billion total acres of land.
Lovey80 said:All you jokers that think we have enough arable land to feed a doubling in population? Top soil figures and potash reserves alone make that laughable. There is a very good reason BHP attempted a $38.6B take-over of Potash corp. Why would the worlds largest and arguably best run mining company want to diversify so heavily in fertilizer? Hint, they don't need that much for explosives.
hussman said:How much excess food could the west have transported and distributed to third world countries if the oil that was burnt in the tanks/hummers/fighter jets were used for cargo ships.
bordsilver said:Lovey80 said:All you jokers that think we have enough arable land to feed a doubling in population? Top soil figures and potash reserves alone make that laughable. There is a very good reason BHP attempted a $38.6B take-over of Potash corp. Why would the worlds largest and arguably best run mining company want to diversify so heavily in fertilizer? Hint, they don't need that much for explosives.
Easily more than enough arable land. It's simply a matter of cost. Using potash and fertilisers are simply a cheaper way of producing the food. We could quadruple our population and still have the resources required to feed the population (albeit probably at the expense of a feeding a few hundred other species to the same extent but that's all part of the trade off).
Scarcity of food and scarcity of the cheap foods we currently enjoy are two completely different things but all too often get confused. There isn't a shortage of lobsters in the world, there's a "shortage" of supply compared to what we are willing to pay.
Dogmatix said:hussman said:How much excess food could the west have transported and distributed to third world countries if the oil that was burnt in the tanks/hummers/fighter jets were used for cargo ships.
This is a good point... but would it be wise to transport food to countries that don't have enough in the long-term? I understand short-term food shortages should be supported, but what is the point of prolonging a losing situation if a country continues to overpopulate vs their resources, and requires continual 'aid' in order to manage the overpopulation?
The discussion gets a bit moral/ethical from here I guess.
One of the injustices of the world that sticks in my mind is the use of good grains for biofuels/ethanol in the USA, and the feeding of good grains to animals like pigs, which drives up the price of grain worldwide and causes unnecessary starvation or hardship. The US Govt subsidises such biofuels production (which encourages it, even if it is normally unprofitable) and they have plentiful and cheap pig meat.
There are larger issues behind that of course - the major one being the US's 'exhorbitant privilege' of having the world reserve currency.
Lovey80 said:Well said, if you take away any humanitarian feelings towards famine intervention and look at it through black and white eyes, then the logical conclusion is that major parts of areas like Africa simply have a biomass problem. As previously stated, some cultures have big families and big parts of them don't survive. Would it not be more prudent to limit your families to 1 or 2 children in order for them to have the biggest chance of survival through less mouths to actually feed?
It will take a long time to change this cultural problem. As the west helps them achieve higher production from their land, higher numbers of people will survive and create the biomass problem again but albeit at a level much harder for humanitarian efforts to help. Changing the cultural problem faster than the food production problem is the key IMO. That will be very hard to do with religious beliefs (catholic and Muslim) being a significant factor.
Dogmatix said:hussman said:How much excess food could the west have transported and distributed to third world countries if the oil that was burnt in the tanks/hummers/fighter jets were used for cargo ships.
This is a good point... but would it be wise to transport food to countries that don't have enough in the long-term? I understand short-term food shortages should be supported, but what is the point of prolonging a losing situation if a country continues to overpopulate vs their resources, and requires continual 'aid' in order to manage the overpopulation?
The discussion gets a bit moral/ethical from here I guess.
One of the injustices of the world that sticks in my mind is the use of good grains for biofuels/ethanol in the USA, and the feeding of good grains to animals like pigs, which drives up the price of grain worldwide and causes unnecessary starvation or hardship. The US Govt subsidises such biofuels production (which encourages it, even if it is normally unprofitable) and they have plentiful and cheap pig meat.
There are larger issues behind that of course - the major one being the US's 'exhorbitant privilege' of having the world reserve currency.
So, what is your Final solution then?Lovey80 said:All you jokers that think we have enough arable land to feed a doubling in population?
If it turns out to be you & I left promise me you will be gentle :lol:hotel 46 said:half the population, who is worried if the world population is shrinking, by the time we get down to two guys eyeing each other thinking to themselves now were in da shyte we will be generations gone, dont even have to kick this can down the road. same with over population, the usa will nuke them![]()
:lol: That came out wrong!renovator said:promise me you will be gentle :lol:
No sounds right to meWater&Food said::lol: That came out wrong!renovator said:promise me you will be gentle :lol: