Thomas Malthus Archives - Econlife (original) (raw)
March 18, 2024
Why We Should Worry About Our Demand For Sand
Because sand demand includes roads, beach volleyball, glass, concrete, your home's foundation, and solar panels, we might not have enough.
February 3, 2021
What We Can Learn From a Strawberry Contest
Our story starts with a tomato and ends with a strawberry. They both relate to farm productivity. And that could be the problem. Growing Fruit Tomatoes […]
November 17, 2019
What We Can Learn From a Trout
Looking at a hover of trout or a shoal of salmon, we can ask if a fish hatchery is the way to preserve a population for recreation and conservation.
July 17, 2019
Why We Want Sneakers Made From Coffee
Whether it relates to coffee grounds or new clothing patterns, zero waste design can optimize economic efficiency in surprising ways.
June 18, 2019
How Legos Discovered It’s Not Easy to be Green
If we want our Legos to match, attach, and detach, we might have to wait awhile for them to develop the appropriate bio-based plastic.
December 7, 2018
Why Less Land Needs To Make More Food
With population growth adding almost three billion people by 2050, we need to figure out how to produce more food with less land and fewer emissions.
August 19, 2018
An Economics Lesson From an Ant
Not only providing a lesson that relates to building nest tunnels, ant economics can also teach us about diminishing returns to scale.
March 2, 2018
Four Fantastic Charts That Tell What We Need to Know About the Plastic Problem
Store by store, through one aisle that has 700 items, the Dutch supermarket chain Ekoplaza will support sustainability with plastics-free grocery shopping.
January 19, 2018
What The Last Supper Says About Food Portions
Looking at entrée, bread and plate sizes in versions of the Last Supper during the past millennium gives us some clues about portion size history.
October 15, 2011
Will We Have Enough Food in 2050?
The world is getting richer. And richer people eat more meat. And the animals they eat consume more food. Also, everyday, the world has more people. […]