Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response

The world faces a threefold environmental crisis: climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Awareness of these crises is growing, as more and more organizations attempt to control harmful human activities. Despite these efforts, the changes made are insufficient. The media delivers alarming...

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Main Author: Annamaria Lammel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut Veolia Environnement 2025-01-01
Series:Field Actions Science Reports
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7684
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author Annamaria Lammel
author_facet Annamaria Lammel
author_sort Annamaria Lammel
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description The world faces a threefold environmental crisis: climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Awareness of these crises is growing, as more and more organizations attempt to control harmful human activities. Despite these efforts, the changes made are insufficient. The media delivers alarming news on a daily basis, triggering stress that can turn into eco-anxiety, a chronic fear of environmental catastrophe which in turn can lead to depression and states of anxiety. Climate anxiety, a form of eco-anxiety, is a major threat to mental health in the 21st century. It impacts mental health directly via extreme meteorological events, indirectly via consequences such as famine, and vicariously via the media. Young people are particularly susceptible: 47% of young adults in the US state that it impacts their day-to-day lives. Children are especially vulnerable and may develop eco-anxiety from as young as 8 years old. Tackling this widespread mental health problem, linked to a variety of factors, requires taking action that addresses the root of the problem: education, provision of more green spaces, biophilic design, responsible attitudes, a long-term vision on the part of politicians and businesses, and the transformation of our systems. Governments must protect young people, recognize their fears, and involve them in decision-making. Urgent collective action is essential if we are to protect the mental health of younger generations.
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spelling doaj-art-5e2d780f43c94438815da4c71718412c2025-01-30T11:24:36ZengInstitut Veolia EnvironnementField Actions Science Reports1867-139X1867-85212025-01-01274246Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative responseAnnamaria LammelThe world faces a threefold environmental crisis: climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Awareness of these crises is growing, as more and more organizations attempt to control harmful human activities. Despite these efforts, the changes made are insufficient. The media delivers alarming news on a daily basis, triggering stress that can turn into eco-anxiety, a chronic fear of environmental catastrophe which in turn can lead to depression and states of anxiety. Climate anxiety, a form of eco-anxiety, is a major threat to mental health in the 21st century. It impacts mental health directly via extreme meteorological events, indirectly via consequences such as famine, and vicariously via the media. Young people are particularly susceptible: 47% of young adults in the US state that it impacts their day-to-day lives. Children are especially vulnerable and may develop eco-anxiety from as young as 8 years old. Tackling this widespread mental health problem, linked to a variety of factors, requires taking action that addresses the root of the problem: education, provision of more green spaces, biophilic design, responsible attitudes, a long-term vision on the part of politicians and businesses, and the transformation of our systems. Governments must protect young people, recognize their fears, and involve them in decision-making. Urgent collective action is essential if we are to protect the mental health of younger generations.https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7684
spellingShingle Annamaria Lammel
Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
Field Actions Science Reports
title Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
title_full Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
title_fullStr Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
title_full_unstemmed Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
title_short Environmental crises and climate change: Eco-anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
title_sort environmental crises and climate change eco anxiety among young people and the urgent need for a transformative response
url https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/7684
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