Phoenix and its inhabitants are stakeholders and public health is endangered by the increase in air pollution caused by traffic congestion (Cox, 2000). The automotive industry and the oil industry will be two other stakeholder groups involved in this evil problem as these industries play an economic role. Traffic congestion in each group has a very different meaning and obscures the problem definition within that scope. Feature 2: Undefined Solution There is no clear solution for traffic congestion.
The increase in population and overpopulation, especially in urban areas, is one of the biggest problems facing our environmentalists and ecologists. As the population increases, demands on resources, waste management, energy demand, human resource management, other governance and resource management are required. As the population grows, the need to manage and allocate resources in a sustainable way also increases. If we do not use resources in a sustainable way, there may be nothing in the future, scientists know this. Assuming our resources are infinite, we can not live our lives.
The problem of resource utilization and resource creation may not be completely out of the debate on population growth and sustainable development. This research is exploring the concept of growth and productivity, but it does not clearly outline sustainable development resources and population problems in terms of marginal productivity of the population. Environment conservationists think that one of the main threats to sustainable development is the increase in the social population. Of course, this has already been mentioned in this research, but it is necessary to emphasize how population growth affects resource allocation to every society. As outlined in this study, the higher the population growth rate, the more pressure that society will have on natural resources. Again, it depends on the instability of these resources. With an ideal economic structure, the population increase should be an expanded resource base.