Transcript
Jenna Spitzer Around the world, many  youth are worried about climate change.   How is climate anxiety, or fear of climate  change, which can manifest in heightened   emotional or somatic distress, associated with  young people's climate-friendly behaviour? Do   young people who experience more climate anxiety  tend to engage in more climate-friendly behaviour,   or do they tend to engage in more  climate-friendly behaviour up to a   certain point, until they find such  anxiety overwhelming and disengage,   also known as eco-paralysis? Furthermore, does  this association change for young people who,   in addition to experiencing climate anxiety,  experience high levels of environmental efficacy?   That is believing that taking action can still  make a difference to mitigating climate change. To answer these questions we collected data  from three independent groups of young people   from the Netherlands and Colombia. What did  we learn? A lot. To see all the details,   check out the full publication. To summarise,  here are three main takeaways. First,   young people who experienced more climate  anxiety tended to show more climate-friendly   behaviour. Their engagement did not drop  off as they expressed more anxiety. Instead,   youth seemed capable of turning even high  levels of climate anxiety into action. Second, youth seemed especially able  to turn climate anxiety into action   when they also believed that taking  action can still make a difference.   Youth who had lower levels of environmental  efficacy engaged in less climate-friendly   behaviour, even when they expressed high  levels of concern about climate change. Third, we learned that even though the  association between climate anxiety and   climate-friendly behaviour was  linear, it was not strong. Thus,   climate anxiety is by no means the only  factor that motivates youth to engage in   climate-friendly behaviour, even though it  seems to have an overall motivating effect. With this knowledge, we hope that young people  will feel empowered to turn their concern about   climate change into action. We also hope  that parents, Teachers and governments   will be able to earn young people's trust, so  that by working together we can and will make   a difference to prevent climate change,  so young people can have a bright future. Thanks for your attention. We  are eager to hear your thoughts   and questions about this research.  If you would like to get in touch,   please feel welcome to contact our  Lead Authors, Andrik and Jenna.

Climate Anxiety and Adolescents' Pro-environmental Behavior

Duration: 3 mins Publication Date: 30 Jun 2025 Next Review Date: 30 Jun 2028 DOI: 10.13056/acamh.13733

Description

In this Video Abstract, Jenna Spitzer discusses her co-authored JCPP paper ‘Feeling anxious and being engaged in a warming world: climate anxiety and adolescents' pro-environmental behavior’. Climate anxiety is increasingly prevalent among adolescents worldwide. Are climate-anxious adolescents prone to engage in pro-environmental behavior? Or might the association between climate anxiety and pro-environmental be curvilinear, such that high levels of climate anxiety become ‘paralyzing’? And do these associations depend on whether adolescents believe that, with effort, the worst impacts of climate change can still be prevented?

Learning Objectives

1. The association between climate anxiety and pre-environmental behaviour.

2. Moderate climate anxiety versus high levels of climate anxiety and the impact on pre-environmental behaviour.

3. Influence of environmental efficacy on climate-anxious adolescents’ predispositions to engage in pro-environmental behavior.


About this Lesson

Speakers

Jenna Spitzer

Jenna Spitzer

PhD candidate, Utrecht University, Faculty of Behavioural Science

The Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Learn
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