For environmentalists, a growing split over
immigration

By Brad Knickerbocker 

Source >
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0512/p01s04-ussc.html

Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor 

5/12/2006

To environmentalists worried about population growth,
people are people. 
Even if they do their best to live lightly on the
land, their rising numbers are a growing burden on
Earth's resources. And whether they sing the "The
Star-Spangled Banner" in English or in Spanish really
doesn't matter.

As politicians and the public heatedly debate
immigration, so, too, are environmental activists.

The flow of people into the United States is troubling
some environmentalists for two reasons. First, more
Americans means more people living in one of the
world's most resource-consuming cultures. Second,
there's new evidence that Hispanic women who move to
the US have more children than if they stayed put.

"We've got to talk about these issues - population,
birth rates, immigration," says Paul Watson, founder
of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, which
confronts whalers, seal hunters, and those who poach
wildlife in the Galapagos Islands. "Immigration is one
of the leading contributors to population growth. All
we're saying is, those numbers should be reduced to
achieve population stabilization."

Mr. Watson also was a Sierra Club board member.Last
month, he resigned in protest just before his
three-year term ended because he thinks the
organization ignores immigration as a major factor in
population growth.

Beneath the dispute is a political subtext.
Environmentalists generally see themselves as
political progressives; they don't want to be
bedfellows with anti-immigrant activists sometimes
labeled as xenophobic or racist. Very few greens raise
a supportive fist when they see "Stop the Invasion"
billboards sprouting from California to Florida. For
the most part, they skirt the issue.

"The leadership and the membership have said we want
to be neutral on this," says Eric Antebi, national
press secretary for the Sierra Club in San Francisco,
one of the largest and oldest grassroots environmental
groups in the country. It's a global issue, says Mr.
Antebi, caused by environmental degradation and
poverty that need to be solved so people won't have to
look elsewhere for a better life. Other large
environmental groups take the same position.

Yet the US population is far from stabilized, and
immigrants (legal and illegal) are one of the main
reasons. There are about 11 million illegal immigrants
in the US today, 57 percent from Mexico, and another
24 percent from other Latin American countries,
according to the Pew Hispanic Center. Of the US
foreign-born population, nearly 30 percent is illegal,
according to Pew.

The US Census Bureau this week reported that Hispanics
- the largest minority at 42.7 million - are the
nation's fastest-growing group. They are 14.3 percent
of the overall population, but between July 2004 and
July 2005, they accounted for 49 percent of US
population growth. Of the increase of 1.3 million
Hispanics, the Census Bureau reported, 800,000 was
because of natural increase (births minus deaths), and
500,000 was due to immigration.

"The Hispanic population in 2005 was much younger,
with a median age of 27.2 years compared to the
population as a whole at 36.2 years. About a third of
the Hispanic population was under 18, compared with
one-fourth of the total population," according to the
Census Bureau report. That means such younger people
are just entering (or will remain longer in) the years
in which they have children of their own.

Steven Camarota, director of research at the Center
for Immigration Studies in Washington, finds that once
women emigrate to the US, most tend to have more
children than they would have in their home countries.
"Among Mexican immigrants in the United States
fertility averages 3.5 children per woman compared to
2.4 children per woman in Mexico," he wrote in a study
last October. And the same is true among Chinese
immigrants. Fertility is 2.3 in the US compared with
1.7 in China. However, typically these high fertility
rates decline in the successive generations as
immigrants assimilate into America.

"New immigrants (legal and illegal) plus births to
immigrants add some 2.3 million people to the United
States each year," Camarota writes, "accounting for
most of the nation's population increase."

Over the past 60 to 70 years, US population doubled to
nearly 300 million. If current birth and immigration
rates were to remain unchanged for another 60 to 70
years, US population again would double to some 600
million people - the equivalent of adding another
state the size of California every decade.

"You just can't deal with that issue without dealing
with immigration," says Bill Elder of Issaquah, Wash.,
a former Sierra Club activist now organizing prominent
conservation leaders to focus on population.

Though China and India have much larger populations,
the US has the highest population growth rate of all
developed countries. Also, experts say, Americans on
average have greater environmental impact. The
equation for this is I = PAT (Impact = Population x
Affluence x Technology), with such impact being the
main thing determining whether an area's "carrying
capacity" has been exceeded.

Harvard University ecologist Edward Wilson figures
that the "ecological footprint" - which he defined in
a Scientific American article in 2002 as "the average
amount of productive land and shallow sea appropriated
by each person in bits and pieces from around the
world for food, water, housing, energy,
transportation, commerce, and waste absorption" - is
about 5 acres per person worldwide. In the US, each
individual's ecological footprint is about 24 acres,
according to Dr. Wilson.

"Our responsibility for pollution and resource use is
all out of proportion to our numbers," says Alan
Kuper, a retired physicist in Cleveland and founder of
Comprehensive US Sustainable Population. The group
publishes a "Congressional Environmental Scorecard" on
lawmakers' votes about conservation, consumption, and
population, including immigration. "It's not a matter
of where or how people come, it's the growth that we
have to be concerned with," says Dr. Kuper. "If you're
going to be an environmentalist, you have to be
concerned about the numbers as well as the usual
issues - public lands, energy, pollution, and so forth
- because the numbers will just wipe you out."



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