Home ›› 06 Nov 2021 ›› Back

Activists sound alarm on climate anxiety

AFP . Hong Kong
06 Nov 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 06 Nov 2021 01:08:19
Activists sound alarm on climate anxiety
Climate activists Greta Thunberg and Vanessa Nakate attend the Youth4Climate pre-COP26 conference in Milan, Italy, September 28, 2021– Reuters Photo

From Bangladesh to Britain to Nigeria, many young campaigners on the frontlines of the global fight for climate justice now face a new problem: the impact the crisis is having on their mental health.

As thousands of delegates converged at the COP26 summit in Glasgow to discuss ways to tackle the environmental emergency, AFP interviewed three youth activists around the world who spoke candidly of their experience of climate anxiety.

In Bangladesh, ranked seventh for countries most affected by extreme weather, activist Sohanur Rahman said he feels overwhelmed with concern over what he sees as a lack of political will to stop the destruction.

“(The) climate crisis is to be a mental stress, trauma and nightmare,” says the 24-year-old, who now lives in the town of Barisal and who remembers a 2007 super cyclone that killed thousands of people in the South Asian nation.

“It kills me inside,” he says softly, adding that he fears for his parents who live in the village of Nathullabad that was levelled by the cyclone.

‘Environmental doom’

The American Psychological Association has described climate or eco-anxiety as a “chronic fear of environmental doom”.

As with other forms of anxiety, living with it long-term can impair people’s daily ability to function, while exacerbating underlying mental health issues.

Researchers have warned children and young people are particularly vulnerable, as they contemplate a future mired with scorching heatwaves, devastating floods and storms, and rising seas.

A recent report led by researchers at the University of Bath in Britain, surveying 10,000 young people in 10 countries, found that 77 per cent viewed the future as frightening because of climate change.

Around half of the respondents told researchers their fears over the environmental change were affecting their daily lives.

Fear, anxiety, anger

Speaking to AFP in London, activist Dominique Palmer said: “I’m looking at the future, and what we face in the future, and there is a lot of fear and anxiety. And there is anger.

“Young people, myself included, feel betrayed by world leaders,” the 22-year-old said at a climate protest ahead of the COP26 summit.

To deal with her anxiety, she campaigns.

×