CBSE BOARD X, asked by mehtamahi17, 5 months ago

10 lines on can human survive the next 200 years due to this increasing population on earth in Sanskrit.​

Answers

Answered by samueljohn53
0

Answer:

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Explanation:

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Answered by mritunjayy
0

Explanation:

There is strong evidence that the growth of the world population poses serious threats to human health, socioeconomic development and the environment.1,2 In 1992 the Union of Concerned Scientists issued a World Scientists' Warning to Humanity, signed by 1600 prominent scientists, that called attention to threats to life-sustaining natural resources.3 In 1993 a Population Summit of 58 of the world's scientific academies voiced concern about the intertwined problems of rapid population growth, wasteful resource consumption, environmental degradation and poverty.4 These reports share the view that, without stabilization of both population and consumption, good health for many people will remain elusive, developing countries will find it impossible to escape poverty, and environmental degradation will worsen.

Population growth

It has taken only 12 years for the world population to grow from 5 billion to today's 6 billion. This is the shortest time ever to add 1 billion people — a number equivalent to the population of India or the combined population of the United States and Europe.

Over the 17 centuries ending in 1800, the world population grew slowly, from an estimated 250 million to about 1 billion. Over the past 2 centuries, and especially after 1950, declining death rates brought about rapid growth. By 1950 the world population had reached 2.5 billion, the world total fertility rate (TFR: the mean lifetime number of children borne by each woman) was 5.3, and the population was growing by about 40 million per year.5,6 Since 1950 the world TFR has declined to 2.9, but continued declines in death rates and the growth of the population to 6 billion have combined to bring about a doubling of annual growth to 84 million in the world population.7

Over the past 200 years Western nations have made a gradual demographic move from high to low birth rates and death rates. These countries are now growing by

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