
In Other words “almost 30% of all pregnancies, end in abortion”

61 % of the unplanned pregnancies ended in abortion.The number of unintended pregnancies around the world accounted for 48 % of all pregnancies.There are around 121 million or 12.1 crore unintended ( unplanned or unwanted) pregnancies across the world every year, and one in every seven of these occurs in India.In November 2022, there will be 8 billion humans on planet Earth.The UNFPA report has used country-based surveys and datasets to arrive at its conclusions.The Report covers and analyses developments and trends in world population and demographics, as well as shedding light on specific regions, countries and population groups and the unique challenges they face.The theme of the 2022 report “Seeing the Unseen: The case for action in the neglected crisis of unintended pregnancy”.The State of World Population is an annual report published by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).It predicted worldwide famine due to overpopulation, as well as other major societal upheavals, and advocated immediate action to limit population growth. The Population Bomb is a 1968 book written by Stanford University Professor Paul R.Recognizing that their cause will be an uphill battle, especially in the U.S., they outline steps the average person can take to support planned population shrinkage and a less ecologically wasteful lifestyle. Proceeding country by country, the authors, Stanford environmental scientists, map the connections between overpopulation, exhaustion of soils and groundwater, global warming, pollution, depletion of resources, dwindling biodiversity and the widening gap between rich and poor nations.

This important book (a sequel to Paul Ehrlich's 1968 bestseller The Population Bomb ) sounds an alarm we can ill afford to ignore.

The Ehrlichs, articulate and respected advocates of global population control, present an unequivocal message: the world's growing population dwarfs the ecosystem's capacity to sustain life-either humanity will implement massive birth-control programs, or nature will intervene and greatly reduce the number of people through famines, plagues and ecodisasters.
