Where Have All the People Gone Germans are
getting used to a new kind of immigrant. In 1998, a pack of wolves crossed the
Neisse River on the Polish-German border. In the empty landscape of eastern
Saxony, dotted with abandoned mines and declining villages, the wolves found
plenty of deer and few humans. Five years later, a second pack split from the
original, so there’re now two families of wolves in the region. A hundred years
ago, a growing land-hungry population killed off the last of Germany’s wolves.
Today, it’s the local humans whose numbers are under threat.
Villages are empty, thanks to the region’s low birth rate and rural
flight. Home to 22 of the world’s 25 lowest fertility rate countries, Europe
will lose 30 million people by 2030, even with continued immigration. The
biggest population decline will hit rural Europe. As Italians, Spaniards,
Germans and others produce barely three-fifths of children needed to maintain
status quo, and as rural flight sucks people into Europe’s suburbs and cities,
the countryside will lose a quarter of its population. The implications of this
demographic (人口的) change will be far-reaching. Environmental
Changes The postcard view of Europe is of a continent where
every scrap of land has long been farmed, fenced off and settled. But the
continent of the future may look rather different. Big parts of Europe will
renaturalize. Bears are back in Austria. In Swiss Alpine valleys, farms have
been receding and forests are growing back. In parts of France and Germany,
wildcats and wolves have re-established their ranges. The shrub
and forest that grows on abandoned land might be good for deer and wolves, but
is vastly less species-rich than traditional farming, with its pastures, ponds
and hedges. Once shrub covers everything, you lose the meadow habitat. All the
flowers, herbs, birds, and butterflies disappear. A new forest doesn’t get
diverse until a couple of hundred years old. All this is not
necessarily an environmentalist’s dream it might seem. Take the Greek village of
Prastos. An ancient hill town, Prastos once had 1,000 residents, most of them
working the land. Now only a dozen left, most in their 60s and 70s. The school
has been closed since 1988. Sunday church bells no longer ting. Without farmers
to tend the fields, rain has washed away the once fertile soil. As in much of
Greece, land that has been orchards and pasture for some 2,000 years is now
covered with dry shrub that, in summer, frequently catches
fire. Varied Pictures of Rural Depopulation Rural
depopulation is not new. Thousands of villages like Prastos dot Europe, the
result of a century or more of emigration, industrialization, and agricultural
mechanization. But this time it’s different because never has the rural birth
rate so low. In the past, a farmer could usually find at least one of his
offspring to take over the land. Today, the chances are that he has only a
single son or daughter, usually working in the city and rarely willing to
return. In Italy, more than 40% of the country’s 1.9 million farmers are at
least 65 years old. Once they die out, many of their farms will join the 6
million hectares — one third of Italy’s farmland — that has already been
abandoned. Rising economic pressures, especially from reduced
government subsidies, will amplify the trend. One third of Europe’s farmland is
marginal, from the cold northern plains to the dry Mediterranean (地中海) hills.
Most of these farmers rely on EU subsides, since it’s cheaper to import food
from abroad. Without subsidies, some of the most scenic European landscapes
wouldn’t survive. In the Austrian or Swiss Alps, defined for centuries by
orchards, cows, high mountain pastures, the steep valleys are labor-intensive to
farm, with subsidies paying up to 90% of the cost. Across the border in France
and Italy, subsidies have been reduced for mountain farming. Since then, across
the southern Alps, villages have emptied and forests have grown back in. Outside
the range of subsidies, in Bulgaria, Romania and Ukraine, big tracts of land are
returning to wild. Big Challenges The truth is
varied and interesting. While many rural regions of Europe are emptying out,
others will experience something of a renaissance. Already, attractive areas
within driving distance of prosperous cities are seeing robust revivals, driven
by urban flight and an in-flooding of childless retirees. Contrast that with
less-favored areas, from the Spanish interior to eastern Europe. These face
dying villages, abandoned farms and changes in the land not seen for
generations. Both types of regions will have to cope with steeply ageing
population and its accompanying health and service needs. Rural Europe is the
laboratory of demographic changes. For governments, the
challenge has been to develop policies that slow the demographic decline or
attract new residents. In some places such as Britain and France, large parts of
countryside are reviving as increasingly wealthy urban middle class in search of
second homes recolonises villages and farms. Villages in central Italy are
counting on tourism to revive their town, turning farmhouses into hostels for
tourists and hikers. But once baby boomers start dying out
around 2020, populations will start to decline so sharply that there simply
won’t be enough people to reinvent itself. It’s simply unclear how long current
government policies can put off the inevitable. "We are now
talking about civilized depopulation. We just have to make sure that old people
we leave behind are taken care of." Says Mats Johansson of Royal Institute of
Technology in Stockholm. The biggest challenge is finding creative ways to keep
up services for the rising proportion of seniors. When the Austrian village of
Klans, thinly spread over the Alpine foothills, decided it could no longer
afford a regular public bus service, the community set up a public
taxi-on-demand service for the aged. In thinly populated Lapland where doctors
are few and far between, tech-savvy Finns the rising demand for specialized
health care with a service that uses videoconferencing and the Internet for
remote medical examination. Another pioneer is the village of
Aguaviva, one of rapidly depopulating areas in Spain. In 2000, Mayor Manznanares
began offering free air-fares and housing for foreign families to settle in
Aguaviva. Now the mud-brown town of about 600 has 130 Argentine and Romanian
immigrants, and the town’s only school has 54 pupils. Immigration was one
solution to the problem. But most foreign immigrants continue to prefer cities.
And within Europe migration only exports the problem. Western European look
towards eastern Europe as a source for migrants, yet those countries have
ultra-low birth rates of their own. Now the increasingly worried
European governments are developing policies to make people have more children,
from better childcare to monthly stipends (津贴) linked to family size. But while
these measures might raise the birth rate slightly, across the much of the
ageing continent there are just too few potential parents around.
(1,150 words) ______ are two examples of finding creative ways to keeping up services for the rapidly aging population in rural Europe.
【参考答案】
Public taxi-on-demand service and videoconferencing and Inte......