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25 Facts in Observance of World Population Day July 11 By Norm Schriever
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In 1989 the United Nations recommended that July 11 should be the day the international community observes
World Population Day, a perfect time to highlight population issues and work to solve them together. This year’s World Population Day is even more significant, with a theme of “Investing in teenage girls,” a critical mission for all nations and people around the globe. Here are 25 facts about world population in honor of the United Nation’s World Population Day: 1. There are over 7.4 billion people on earth now according to the site World O Meters, where you can even watch a running count, including births, deaths, and population growth by day (although they are approximations.) (Source) 2. It’s estimated that 108 billion people have lived throughout history (as of 2011). That means that approximately 6.5% of all the people that have ever lived are alive right now. (Source) 3. In the year 1000 AD, the world population was only 400 million. In 1750 AD, 750 years later, the population was 800 million and it first reached the 1 billion mark in 1804. By 1927 we had 2 billion people, and 3 billion by 1960. But it only took