Climate remains biggest worry among young Europeans

Young people in Europe worry most about climate change—even in the midst of a pandemic that has hammered the global economy and turned daily life upside-down around the world, a poll showed on Wednesday.

Almost half of the respondents in the survey of more than 22,000 young people in 23 European countries said they considered global warming among humanity’s most serious problems.

Environmental degradation ranked second in the list of top worries with 44 percent, followed by the spread of infectious diseases and poverty with 36 percent each. Respondents were asked to list up to three issues.

The European Environmental Bureau (EEB), a network of green groups which commissioned the survey, said the results suggested young people were clear-sighted about long-term global challenges.

Mainstream movements

“At a time when the world is in the throes of a global pandemic and attendant socioeconomic crisis, this is remarkable,” EEB spokesperson Khaled Diab told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an emailed statement.“This poll confirms that the youth climate movements, such as Fridays for Future, are not fringe movements but represent the youth mainstream… Politicians and policymakers must listen to their voices.”Fridays for Future is a global school strike movement launched by Swedish teen climate activist Greta Thunberg.Young climate activists have struggled to maintain momentum under COVID-19 restrictions that have made 2019’s high-profile, millions-strong street marches impossible.

Left out

While young people have taken on climate negotiator roles with real power in countries from Costa Rica to the Netherlands and Sudan, many are still left out of other key decisions, such as how pandemic recovery funds are being spent. The survey conducted largely online by pollster Ipsos between October and November last year found more than eight in 10 people aged 15 to 35 said they were fairly, very or extremely worried about climate change.

Only 3 percent of interviewees said they were not worried at all, while 8 percent said they did not believe in climate change.

Marked concern

Southern European youngsters were markedly more concerned than their peers elsewhere on the continent, with 71 percent of Spaniards and 63 percent of Portuguese saying they were extremely worried compared to 23 percent in Latvia, according to the poll.

Diab said that was unsurprising given that Spain and Portugal have already experienced forest fires, crippling heatwaves and longer droughts, which scientists expect to become more frequent due to climate change. —Reuters

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